The meeting will take place from Sunday, 1st September 2024 afternoon (arrival, ice-breaker and dinner) to Friday, 6th September 2024 morning (breakfast and departure). The scientific activities will take place from Monday to Thursday (recreational/cultural activities are scheduled on Wednesday afternoon).
The scientific programme consists of keynote oral presentations and posters, that will be organized into several thematic sessions.
- The oral presentations are by invitation only and last about 45 minutes including 10 minutes question time.
- Online attendance is possible for keynote presentations and plenary discussions.
- All participants can contribute to poster sessions. The poster format is A0 portrait. Note that there are no printing facilities for posters on site.
- The programme offers visibility to early career participants through the 1-minute poster presentations. Time slots are dedicated to discussions between early-career scientists and keynote speakers, that precede plenary discussions.
- The programme features a practical training session on modelling tools, organized by Boris Kaus.
More information about invited speakers:
- Attila Balazs (ETH Zürich, Switzerland)
- David Bercovici (Yale University, US)
- Nestor Cerpa (University of Montpellier & CNRS, France)
- Hana Čížková (Charles Universiy, Prague, Czech Republic)
- Luca Dal Zilio (Earth Observatory of Singapore)
- Rhodri Davies (Research School of Earth Sciences, the Australian National University, Canberra, Australa)
- Lukas Fuchs (University of Frankfurt, Germany)
- Muriel Gerbault (University of Toulouse & IRD, France)
- Anne Glerum (GFZ Potsdam, Germany)
- Anna Gülcher (NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, USA)
- Richard Katz (University of Oxford, UK)
- Stéphane Labrosse (ENS Lyon, Lyon, France)
- Marta Pérez-Gussinyé (University of Bremen, Germany)
- Zhensheng Wang (China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, China)
- outside community: Denis Andrault (mineral physics – University of Clermont Ferrand, France), Maurine Montagnat (ice rheology – University of Grenoble-Alpes & CNRS, France)