Title
> > > > > >
Home
Registration
Programme
Abstract Submission
Keynote Speakers
Accommodation
Travel Information

  Contact us:   qra11adm@liv.ac.uk

Sponsors

British Society for Geomorphology

 School of Environmental Sciences

 Geological Society


www.radiocarbon.eu

 
 

University of Liverpool

4th - 6th January 2011

P.L. Gibbard (sponsored by the Geological Society)
University of Cambridge
Quaternary changes in temperate hydrological systems
Abstract

Phil is Professor of Quaternary Palaeoenvironments in the Department of Geography and his main interest lies in Pleistocene and Neogene Geology, sedimentation and the construction of stratigraphy using appropriate litho-, bio- and chronostratigraphical methods to establish the changing palaeogeography and palaeoenvironment for any particular area.

J. Woodward
University of Manchester

Quaternary Change and palaeohydrology: Recent Advances from the Mediterranean
Abstract

Jamie is Professor of Physical Geography at the School of Environment and Development and he is interested in the nature and impacts of Quaternary environmental change in the Mediterranean and the Nile basin.

G. St-Onge (Wiley Lecture)
Institut des sciences de la mer de Rimouski (ISMER) and GEOTEP
Evidence of Lake Agassiz-Ojibway final outburst flood Eastern Canada
Abstract 

Guillaume is Professor in marine geology at the Institut des Sciences de la Mer de Rimouski, and is interested in Quaternary stratigraphy and palaeoenvironments, using magnetic susceptibility to understand mass movement in marine environments. 

D. Charman
University of Exeter

Quantification and calibration of peatland palaeohydrological records
Abstract 

Dan is Professor in Physical Geography at the University of Exeter and has a strong interest in long-term ecological and climatic change of wetland systems, as well as on carbon cycle.

J. Warburton (sponsored by British Society for Geomorphology)
University of Durham

Fluvial system response to the Cumbria floods, November 2009: business as usual or a sign of things to come?
Abstract 

Jeff is Reader in Physical Geography at the University of Durham in the Catchment, River and Hillslope Science Research group and has strong research interests in fluvial geomorphology, sediment budgets, shallow landslides, mountain sediment systems and geocryology. He a co-investigator on a current NERC and NERC-ARSF funded programme looking at the November floods that affected Cumbria.

 

 
30-Nov-2010