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Dear Colleagues,
CORE (COres for Research and E<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgcr.tamu.…>ducation) School<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgcr.tamu.…> is a five-day workshop (July 20-24, 2026) hosted by the Gulf Coast Repository (GCR). The overarching goal of CORE School is to provide a mechanism to maintain expertise in scientific ocean drilling methods and subseafloor core analysis. Please share this opportunity with early career researchers that may be interested--particularly those working on or interested in IODP materials/data, but have not had an opportunity to participate in a scientific ocean drilling expedition.
Additional goals of the workshop include:
* Improving knowledge in scientific ocean drilling methods,
* Increasing awareness of the scientific potential of legacy cores,
* Training a new generation of scientists in the analytical techniques available,
* Providing training on data analysis and correlation of different data sets,
* Providing networking opportunities for early career scientists and geosciences faculty, and
* Possibly identifying potential topics for legacy projects and drilling proposals.
The workshop will include the collection of new data using the instrumentation of the GCR<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgcr.tamu.…> and the exploration of related legacy data and the integration of legacy and newly collected data.
If you are interested in participating in this workshop, please complete the application<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fforms.gle…>.
We welcome applications from a wide range of specialties (e.g., sedimentology, physical properties, paleomagnetism), and we encourage graduate students, early career scientists, and faculty from non-R1 institutions, including two-year colleges, to apply.
Funding (including travel, meals, and incidentals) is provided for all U.S. participants.
Applications will close at the end of the day on February 15, 2026.
If you have any questions about the workshop or the application process, please contact Laurel Childress<mailto:childress@tamu.edu>.
All the best,
Brendan
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Brendan Reilly
Lamont Assistant Research Professor
Director, Lamont-Doherty Core Repository<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcorerepos…>
LDEO Paleomagnetics and Stratigraphy (PAST) Group<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fpaleomag.…>
Geosciences 109
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University
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The Ocean Science Meeting will be held in Glasgow between the 22nd - 27th of February 2026.
If you work on fjords please consider submitting an abstract to session CC010 - Fjords in Transition: Connecting Physical, Biogeochemical, and Ecosystem Dynamics in the Land-Ocean Continuum Under a Changing Climate.
The session description can be found here:
https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fagu.confe…
The deadline for abstract submission is the 20th of August 2025
Craig
[cid:28eb3d51-bfaf-4b7a-96c3-0f6ce5aa5f8c]
Craig Smeaton
Lecturer in Physical Geography
School of Geography and Sustainable Development
Irvine Building, North Street,
St Andrews, Fife, KY16 9AL
+44 (0)1334 464 014
The University of St Andrews is a charity registered in Scotland, No: SC013532
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On behalf of the session chairs, we invite you to submit an abstract to the following session at the Ocean Sciences meeting in Glasgow, Scotland to be held 22-27 February 2026. Abstracts are due on August 20th.
(https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.agu.o…)
CC012 - Ice-Ocean-Seafloor Interactions and Climate Dynamics Across Timescales
This session brings together studies investigating the dynamic interactions between ice sheets, oceans, and the seafloor across a range of temporal and spatial scales. Polar and subpolar regions are key components of the climate system, with changes in ice sheet extent, ocean circulation, and seafloor morphology playing critical roles in modulating global climate, sea level, and deep water formation. We welcome multidisciplinary contributions that draw on geological, geophysical, geochemical, and proxy records from both hemispheres to examine past and present cryosphere-ocean-seafloor processes. These include studies of ice sheet dynamics from ice-proximal to deep-sea settings, reconstructions of high-latitude climate variability, oceanic responses to glaciation and deglaciation, and the influence of bathymetric evolution on circulation pathways. Submissions that integrate observations, modeling, and multi-proxy approaches to explore climate transitions, teleconnections, and feedback mechanisms are especially encouraged. This session aims to foster cross-disciplinary dialogue on the coupled evolution of the cryosphere, ocean, and solid Earth, offering insights into the processes driving climate change and the interpretation of past environmental archives.
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Shannon Klotsko, PhD
Associate Professor | Earth and Ocean Sciences | Center for Marine Science
Manager of CMS Sediment Analysis<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Funcw.edu%…> Core Facility
University of North Carolina Wilmington
Tel: 910.962.2346
Pronouns: she/her
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Dear all,
We invite you to submit an abstract to an interdisciplinary AGU25 session on ocean island and seamount processes:
V020 - Multi-disciplinary perspectives on ocean island and seamount processes from above the top to below the bottom<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Furldefens…>
Session Description:
Ocean islands provide a window into mantle chemistry and dynamics that lead to innovations in our understanding of the properties of Earth’s mantle and its evolution over geologic time. Furthermore, the growth and eventual subsidence of marine volcanic islands alters ocean circulation, biological evolution of island species, and the chemistry of the ocean-atmosphere system. This session aims to unite advancements from a wide range of studies to address questions related to melting and fluid dynamics of the mantle beneath these features, the composition of the mantle sourcing ocean island volcanism, the magmatic and physical expressions of volcanism at ocean islands, impacts of these systems on the ocean-atmosphere system, and relationships between these themes. We intend for this session to highlight the major themes for advances and challenges in seamount and ocean island science, identifying gaps in knowledge that could be addressed through cross-disciplinary collaboration.
Cross-Listed
Tectonophysics, Paleoceanography and Paleoclimatology, Biogeosciences
We hope to see you in New Orleans in December!
Conveners:
Janine Andrys, Boise State University
Darin Schwartz, Boise State University
Eric Mittelstaedt, University of Idaho
--
Janine Andrys
(she/her)
Postdoctoral Research Fellow
Department of Geosciences
Boise State University
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Hi,
I would like to call your attention to an open PhD position in our research group at Aarhus University in Denmark. The position is part of the GreenFjords Project: Hydrography, deglacial history, and ice-ocean interaction of NE Greenland fjords through 12,000 years. The PhD student will work with multiproxy analyses of marine sediment cores from fjords in northeast Greenland, to reconstruct the local glacial history, associated changes in oceanography, general climate variability and impacts on marine ecosystems.
The deadline for applications is 1 August 2025 and the earliest starting date will be 1 November 2025.
All further information and instructions on how to apply, can be found here:
https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fphd.nat.a…
Feel free to forward this to anyone you think might be interested.
Regards,
Christof
-----------------------------------------------
Christof Pearce, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
-----------------------------------------------
Department of Geoscience, iClimate & Arctic Research Center
Aarhus University
Building 1672, Office 221
Høegh Guldbergs Gade 2
8000 Aarhus C
Mobile (+45) 9350 8915
Personal homepage at Aarhus Univewrsity<https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.au.dk…>
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[This email originated from outside of OSU. Use caution with links and attachments.]
Research Opportunities in Arctic & Marine Sciences at Stockholm University - One PhD and eight Postdoctoral Fellow positions. Apply until mid-April to mid-May 2025.
The Departments of Geological Sciences and Meteorology at Stockholm University, invite applications for postdoctoral and PhD positions in Arctic and marine sciences, funded by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW). These positions span geochemical oceanographic proxies, micropaleontology, ocean model-ling, ice sheet modelling, and bathymetric mapping, including AI-driven approaches. Successful candidates will work in multidisciplinary teams to investigate ocean-cryosphere interactions around North Greenland, advancing our understanding of climate and environmental change in the high Arctic realm.
The positions are offered within the framework of two closely related research projects: "Tracing How Atlantic Water Impacts North Greenland (THAWING)" and "Using AI to Predict the Retreat of Glaciers".
Project: Using AI to Predict the Retreat of Glaciers
Postdoctoral Fellow in AI-Based Analysis of Submarine Glacial Landforms
Application deadline: April 15, 2025
Project: Using AI to Predict the Retreat of Glaciers
Postdoctoral Fellow in Geomorphological Analyses of Submarine Landforms
Application deadline: April 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
PhD student in North Greenland Marine Micropaleontology
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Arctic geochemical oceanographic proxies
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Ocean-Glacier Dynamics
Application deadline: May 5, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in numerical ice-sheet modelling
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Analyses of Marine geophysical mapping data
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Modelling of the Arctic Ocean Circulation
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Observational Oceanography with Machine Learning applications
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
More information is found here:
https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.su.se…
--
Professor of Marine Geology and Geophysics
Deputy Vice President for Science
Stockholm University
Department of Geological Sciences
106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
phone: (+46)-8-16 47 19
mobile: (+46)-73-619 14 09
fax:: (+46)-8-674 78 97
email: martin.jakobsson(a)geo.su.se<mailto:martin.jakobsson@geo.su.se>
[This email originated from outside of OSU. Use caution with links and attachments.]
Research Opportunities in Arctic & Marine Sciences at Stockholm University - One PhD and eight Postdoctoral Fellow positions. Apply until mid-April to mid-May 2025.
The Departments of Geological Sciences and Meteorology at Stockholm University, invite applications for postdoctoral and PhD positions in Arctic and marine sciences, funded by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation (KAW). These positions span geochemical oceanographic proxies, micropaleontology, ocean model-ling, ice sheet modelling, and bathymetric mapping, including AI-driven approaches. Successful candidates will work in multidisciplinary teams to investigate ocean-cryosphere interactions around North Greenland, advancing our understanding of climate and environmental change in the high Arctic realm.
The positions are offered within the framework of two closely related research projects: "Tracing How Atlantic Water Impacts North Greenland (THAWING)" and "Using AI to Predict the Retreat of Glaciers".
Project: Using AI to Predict the Retreat of Glaciers
Postdoctoral Fellow in AI-Based Analysis of Submarine Glacial Landforms
Application deadline: April 15, 2025
Project: Using AI to Predict the Retreat of Glaciers
Postdoctoral Fellow in Geomorphological Analyses of Submarine Landforms
Application deadline: April 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
PhD student in North Greenland Marine Micropaleontology
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Arctic geochemical oceanographic proxies
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Ocean-Glacier Dynamics
Application deadline: May 5, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in numerical ice-sheet modelling
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Analyses of Marine geophysical mapping data
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Modelling of the Arctic Ocean Circulation
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
Project: Thawing
Postdoctoral Fellow in Observational Oceanography with Machine Learning applications
Application deadline: May 15, 2025
More information is found here:
https://nam04.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.su.se…
--
Professor of Marine Geology and Geophysics
Deputy Vice President for Science
Stockholm University
Department of Geological Sciences
106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
phone: (+46)-8-16 47 19
mobile: (+46)-73-619 14 09
fax:: (+46)-8-674 78 97
email: martin.jakobsson(a)geo.su.se<mailto:martin.jakobsson@geo.su.se>