For more information about GeoPRISMS past activities and related sessions at AGU please visit the website at: /agu-townhall.html
The GeoPRISMS Office
Below are all the messages sent by the GeoPRISMS Listserv system, indexed by date with the most recent listserv notice first. There may be a delay of up to 24 hours between a listserv notice being sent and its appearance in this archive. If you cannot find a given notice in this archive, you can contact the GeoPRISMS Office.
For more information about GeoPRISMS past activities and related sessions at AGU please visit the website at: /agu-townhall.html
The GeoPRISMS Office
The purpose of the pilot Field Institute is to determine the best approach for promoting broadly collaborative field-based research on subduction-related exhumed terranes. Participants will be studying the Monterey terrane, including the Salinian, Nacimiento, and Sierra de Salinas blocks. Two to three student participants will be selected from among the applications received. The trip will be led by Mihai Ducea and Alan Chapman, and field work will be focused on high pressure native and accreted rocks of the lower arc crust, including mafic granulites underlying the Salinian pluton, Sierra de Salinas pelitic schist, and the Burro Mountain peridotite body. Students will accompany ~12 faculty-level geoscientists, and will assist with sample collection, sample registration, and shipping. Ground transportation, food, and lodging will be covered by ExTerra, and student participants will additionally receive up to $250 reimbursement of travel expenses to California. Ground transportation will depart from Sacramento following the Goldschmidt conference. There will also be a vehicle departing from San Francisco for those not attending Goldschmidt.
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Opportunity for Students and Early-Career Scientists: Sail on a Cascadia Initiative Expedition in 2014
Application Deadlines: April 15th (Leg 1 only) and May 1st, 2014 (all other legs)
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Information on this multi-disciplinary study, designed to image the magmatic system of Mount St. Helens, Washington, from the subducting slab to the edifice of the volcano, can be found at imush.org.
The iMUSH active-source seismic experiment is scheduled to begin in mid-July 2014 and will last two to three weeks. We require that all volunteers stay for the entire experiment. All volunteers must have a valid driver’s license. Some driving experience with 4-wheel drive vehicles is desirable, but not essential.
Please direct anyone interested in volunteering to http://earthscience.rice.edu/imush/ to learn more about the active-source experiment and to submit an application. For more information contact Eric Kiser, eric.d.kiser@rice.edu.
CALL FOR EARLY CAREER SCIENTISTS: SAIL ON THE R/V LANGSETH
A cruise synopsis is available at: http://www.geoprisms.nineplanetsllc.com/component/content/article/2-uncategorised/517-langseth3d-2014.html
If you are interested in sailing, please send a CV and a statement of up to 500 words describing why you want to participate to each of the four principal investigators (email subject: Langseth3D):
Gregory Mountain (Rutgers University; gmtn@rci.rutgers.edu)
Mladen Nedimovic (Dalhousie University; mladen@dal.ca)
Craig Fulthorpe (University of Texas at Austin; craig@utig.ig.utexas.edu)
and James A. Austin, Jr. (University of Texas at Austin; austinja@austin.utexas.edu)
The deadline to apply is May 15, 2014
PLEASE NOTE, NEW JOB ANNOUNCEMENTS (USUALLY) WILL BE DISTRIBUTED TO THE GeoPRISMS LISTSERV ON THE 1st AND 15th OF EACH MONTH.
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RV Marcus Langseth user community:
The National Academies are conducting a Decadal Survey of Ocean Sciences to develop a list of the top ocean science priorities for the next decade in the context of the current state of knowledge, ongoing research activities, and resource availability. The DSOS committee’s report will present a compelling research strategy for increased understanding of the oceans over the decade 2015-2025.
The report generated from this study will provide key input to NSF’s Division of Ocean Sciences and likely define the the allocation of experiment and facility funding from within OCE for the next decade.
The RV Marcus Langseth is partly funded through the Division of Ocean Sciences and the results of this report will greatly impact the future growth in capability and availability of 2D and 3D seismic data available to researchers. The oceans present a huge ‘blank spot’ to our current collective available geophysics data that will need to be instrumented to further our understanding of Earth’s geophysical processes.
Please take some time to review existing comments and submit your own comments on the need for increased geophysics measurement capability in the oceans.
Existing comments can be reviewed at: http://nas-sites.org/dsos2015/comment-forum/
Comments may be submitted at: http://nas-sites.org/dsos2015/
The deadline for comments is March 15!
Dale S. Sawyer
Chair of Marcus Langseth Science Oversight Committee
UNOLS
dale@rice.edu
713-348-5106 (o)
Ocean Bottom Seismometer user community:
The National Academies are conducting a Decadal Survey of Ocean Sciences to develop a list of the top ocean science priorities for the next decade in the context of the current state of knowledge, ongoing research activities, and resource availability. The DSOS committee’s report will present a compelling research strategy for increased understanding of the oceans over the decade 2015-2025.
The report generated from this study will provide key input to NSF’s Division of Ocean Sciences and likely define the the allocation of experiment and facility funding from within OCE for the next decade.
The Ocean Bottom Seismograph Instrument Pool is funded through the Division of Ocean Sciences and the results of this report will greatly impact the future growth in capability and availability of Ocean Bottom Seismometers available to researchers. The oceans present a huge ‘blank spot’ to our current collective available geophysics data that will need to be instrumented to further our understanding of Earth’s geophysical processes.
Please take some time to review existing comments and submit your own comments on the need for increased geophysics measurement capability in the oceans.
Existing comments can be reviewed at: http://nas-sites.org/dsos2015/comment-forum/
comments may be submitted at: http://nas-sites.org/dsos2015/
The deadline for comments is March 15!
Brent Evers
Project Manager
OBSIP Management Office
Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology
1200 New York Avenue, NW
Suite 400
202-682-2220 x156
brent.evers@iris.edu
Message from the OBSIP Management Office:
The OBSIP Management Office (OMO) has restricted access to the Cascadia Initiative dataset (network ID 7D) at the IRIS Data Management Center (DMC) in order to resolve a channel naming error that results in a large number of stations having an incorrect relative orientation. The channel-naming errors affected LDEO OBS data in Year 1 and Year 2 and the SIO OBS data for Year 2. As a result of this change, OBSIP will make all of the Cascadia Initiative data consistent in relative orientation.
Specific details of the issue will be made available shortly on the OBSIP website Cascadia experiment page:
http://www.obsip.org/experiments/experiment-list/2011/cascadia
The OMO is working with OBSIP instrument centers to resolve the issue as expeditiously as possible. When the corrected data are again available for open distribution from the DMC, the OMO will notify the community.
For researchers still wishing to use the Cascadia data with known channel naming issues, or for any other questions relating to this issue, please contact Jessica Lodewyk (jessica.lodewyk@iris.edu) at the OBSIP Management Office to receive access.
For general OBSIP notices, instrument information, and OBS technical discussion, please consider subscribing to the OBSIPtec mailing list:
http://www.iris.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/obsiptec
Brent Evers
Project Manager
OBSIP Management Office
Incorporated Research Institutions for Seismology
1200 New York Avenue, NW
Suite 400
202-682-2220 x156
brent.evers@iris.edu