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Speakers
and Presenters News Releases* (PDF files)
*INQUA
and DRI are not responsible for content of material provided by speakers
/ organizations.
Listed
in numerical order by session
-
- Coastal
Upwelling in the California Current Was Weaker 6,000 Years Ago than
Today, According to New Studies. Noah Diffenbaugh, University
of California, Santa Cruz. (Poster 16-5, Booth 5, Pavilion) Paper available
at: http://www.es.ucsc.edu/~suresh/pubs.html
- No
Heat Without Fire: How peatland fires contribute to global warming.
Indonesia Burning: the Contemporary Role of Fire in the Carbon Dynamics
of Tropical Peatlands. Susan Page, University of Leicester, UK.
(Symposium Keynote Presentation 21-7, Crystal Room 3&4)
- Agricultural
Lands May Store More Carbon Dioxide in Rivers Than Forests. Increase
in the Export of Alkalinity From North America’s Largest River: Climate
and Land-use Controls on Alkalinity Export From the Mississippi River,
Peter Raymond, Yale University. (Symposium 33-9, Crystal Room
1&2)
- Provenance
and Age of Loess on Long Island, NY USA. Vesna Kundic, Stony
Brook University; Jian Zhong, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory.
(Poster 36-13, Booth 40, Pavilion)
- New
data from loess and paleosols of the US Midwest. Nathaniel W
Rutter, Konstantin G Dlussky, University of Alberta, Edmonton,
Canada. (Poster 53-8, Booth 39, Pavilion)
- Superfloods
Scoured the Earth in the Ice Age!!: The Shoreline Morphology of the
Quaternary Lake Chuja-kuray, Altai Mountains, South-central Siberia.
Paul Carling, Tomsk State University, Tomsk, Russia. (Poster
60-18, Booth 105, Pavilion)
- Noah’s
Flood as a Possible Result of Collision of a Big Asteroid with the Sun.
Does Milankovitch Theory Gives the Real Variation of the Solar Radiation
Driving Glaciations?- Only 50% of it. Yavor Y. Shopov, Sofia
University. (Posters 55-12, Booth 139 and 56-13, Booth 155, Pavilion;
Symposium 85-7, Carson Room 3&4)
- Dust-influenced
forcing of late-glacial climate in central North America. Ref: Abstract
No. 53612 Unprecedented Aeolian Mass Accumulation Rates Revealed by
Luminescence Dating of Loess from Midcontinental North America, Helen
Roberts, University of Wales, Aberystwyth (Symposium 63-3, Carson
Room 1&2); Abstract No. 54959 Mass Accumulation Rates and Competing
Loess Sources During the Last Glacial Period in the Missouri River Basin,
North American Midcontinent, Arthur Bettis, University of Iowa
(Poster 71-2, Booth 14, Pavilion)
- Patterns
Explained by Laws Not Yet Discovered? Haynes, Gary A., Department
of Anthropology, University of Nevada, Reno. (Symposium 65-11, Tahoe
Room)
- Holocene
Fire Regimes and Geomorphic Response in Conifer Forests of the Northwestern
United States: Evidence of Millennial-Scale Climate Change. Jennifer
Pierce, University of New Mexico. (Symposium 66-1, Crystal Ballroom
1&2)
- The
Holocene of Southwestern Crimea in the Context of Environmental Change
in the Northern Black Sea Region. Carlos E. Cordova, Oklahoma
State University. (Poster 76-6, Booth 79, Pavilion)
- Woody
invasion attributed to European grazing techniques. Evelyn Krull,
Cooperative Centre for Greenhouse Accounting, Australia. (Poster 78-2,
Booth 98, Pavilion)
- Disappearance
of Neanderthals as part of the Late Pleistocene megafaunalextinctions
or due to competition with Modern Humans? John R. Stewart,
University of London, UK. (Symposium 82-3, Crystal Room 1&2)
- Holocene
History of Catastrophic Hurricanes and Fires on the Gulf Coast.
Liu, Kam-biu, Louisiana State University. (Symposium 84-9, Crystal
Room 3&4)
- The
Extinction of the European Neanderthals During Isotope Stage 3.
Terry Hopkinson, University of Leicester, United Kingdom. (Symposium
82-7, Crystal Room 1&2)
- Geology
of a Catastrophe - The When and Where of the Black Sea Flood. Valentina
Yanko-Hombach, Avalon Institute of Applied Science, Winnipeg, Canada.
(Symposium 84-12, Crystal Room 3&4)
- Exposed
continental shelves and the termination of ice ages. [Pedogenesis
of sub-aerially exposed continental shelves during glacial periods and
the production of atmospheric greenhouse gases] Dr Wyss Yim,
Department of Earth Sciences, The University of Hong Kong. (Poster 90-2,
Booth 40, Pavilion)
- Potential
of surveying work of submarine pipelines and cables for studying the
late Quaternary evolution of continental shelves, Dr Wyss Yim,
Department of Earth Sciences, The University of Hong Kong. (Poster 90-6,
Booth 44, Pavilion)
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