[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[IGSMAIL-5089]: Sea Level Session, IAMAS 2005, Beijing
- To: Recipient List Suppressed: ;
- Subject: [IGSMAIL-5089]: Sea Level Session, IAMAS 2005, Beijing
- From: "C.K. Shum" <ckshum @ osu.edu>
- Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2005 12:06:46 -0500
- Sender: owner-igsmail
******************************************************************************
IGS Electronic Mail 26 Jan 12:01:35 PST 2005 Message Number 5089
******************************************************************************
Author: C.K. Shum
Our sincere apologies for cross-listing.
Dear colleagues:
We would like to call your attention to the following special interdisciplinary
session in the 2005 IAMAS Meeting in Beijing, 2-11 August, 2005, on:
Sea Level Rise: Past Changes and Future Expectations
Please note that the abstract submission deadline is on 25 February, 2005
(http://www.iamas2005.com). We would appreciate your considerations to
contribute papers to this session and the IAMAS meeting.
Sincerely,
Richard Peltier, Juncheng Zuo, Mike MacCracken, C.K. Shum
Convenors
C10: Sea Level Rise: Past Changes and Future Expectations (ICCL)
The state of the climate can affect sea level in several ways.
Warming of the world ocean, which reduces the density of ocean
waters, and the melting of mountain glaciers were likely the primary
factors contributing to a rise in sea level of 10-20 cm over the 20th
century, with changes in the storage of water in reservoirs and
aquifers and changes in land cover and soil moisture also possibly
playing roles. With the continuation of global warming, each of these
factors is likely to also play a role, but increasingly augmented by
possible changes in the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets. Changes
in the ocean circulation and climate variability (e.g., persistent
changes in ENSO) can also contribute to changes in sea level,
especially on a regional basis. In addition, isostatic changes in the
Earth's surface resulting from climatic changes over the Pleistocene
and Holocene will affect how sea level change is experienced in
particular regions. This symposium invites papers on studies of past
and future changes in global sea level and on the large-scale
manifestation of these changes in various areas of the world.
Conveners:
W. Richard Peltier, Department of Physics, University of Toronto,
Toronto, Ontario M5S 1A7, Canada; Tel: +1-416-978-2938; Fax:
+1-416-978-8905; peltier @ atmosp.physics.utoronto.ca
Juncheng Zuo, Oceanography Department, College of Physical and
Environmental Oceanography, Ocean University of China, Yushan Road 5,
Qingdao, Shandong 266003, China; Tel. and fax.: +86-0532-2032010;
zuo @ ouc.edu.cn
C.K. Shum, Geodetic Science, Ohio State University, 470 Hitchcock
Hall, 2070 Neil Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43210, U.S.A. Tel:
+1-614-292-7118, Fax: +1-614-292-2957, ckshum @ osu.edu
Michael MacCracken, 6308 Berkshire Drive, Bethesda MD, 20814, USA;
Tel/Fax: +1-301-564-4255; mmaccrac @ comcast.net
Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2005 16:51:40 +0800
From: IAMAS 2005 <iamas @ lasg.iap.ac.cn>
Subject: IAMAS2005 reminder --Abstract Submission Deadline: February 25, 2005
To: iamasgroup @ lasg.iap.ac.cn
X-OriginatingIP: 192.168.113.134 (iamas)
X-CanItPRO-Stream: osuedu
Dear Sir/Madam,
The International Association of Meteorology and Atmospheric
Sciences (IAMAS), will
hold its biennial Scientific Assembly in Beijing, China from 2-11
August 2005. The
theme of the conference is The Fascinating Atmosphere: Changeable
and Changing, and
will cover all areas of meteorology and atmospheric sciences,
including dynamics,
radiation, chemistry, electricity, clouds and precipitation, and
climate variability
and change.
Abstract submission can be done electronically on the IAMAS 2005 Web site
(http://www.iamas2005.com).
If you haven't submitted an abstract, please notice that the
deadline is 25 February
2005. Registration can also be done over the Web, and early bird
registration is
available until 1 June 2005.
The hotel and tour (pre-tour, post-tour, weekend excursions)
reservations are also
available. August is the tourist season in China. Due to high
occupancy then, please
book your hotel and tour early.
Best,
Ms.Zheng LIN (Jenny)
Conference Secretariat of IAMAS2005
LASG
Institute of Atmospheric Physics
Chinese Academy of Sciences
P.O.Box 9804, Beijing 100029
P.R. China
Tel: +86-10-62043436
Fax: +86-10-62043526
E-mail: iamas @ lasg.iap.ac.cn