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Connect with Colleagues, Broaden Your Knowledge Base, and Embrace the Joy of Science!
12013 AGU FALL MEETING
Using Innovation to Take Fall Meeting to the Next Level
For 46 years the American Geophysical Union has worked to make the Fall Meeting the premier gath-ering of Earth and space scientists in the world. This year is no exception.
Not only have we made improvements to the mobile appwhich now allows you to seamlessly plan and view your schedule on a variety of deviceswe have also focused on using technol-ogy and social media to facilitate the community building and engagement we know is so important to our attendees.
You told us that having presentations available via live streaming and video on demand makes participation easier for you, so we are increasing our virtual meeting options. We also know that broadcasting Fall Meeting content online helps to build engagement with non-attendee audiences, including those outside of the scientific arena, so were focused on offering content that is far reaching in its relevance. This year we will be live streaming the General Sessions, more than 20 named lectures, and nearly 80 scientific sessions. All live streamed events, as well as 15 additional
sessions, the Public Lecture, and the Honors Ceremony will also be avail-able in video on demand.
To help presenters reach attendee and non-attendee audiences we are continuing the ePoster system, which allows them to display an electronic version of their poster and engage in a dialogue via a discussion board. And in an effort to address the challenges that have stemmed from current travel restrictions, we are also piloting a new program that will allow poster presenters to give their presentations remotely.
The Meeting Central portal gives attendees a place where they can connect with peers, find roommates, get the latest news and updates, and be a part of the Fall Meeting community. And we encourage attendees and enthusiasts alike to tune into the conversation online by following and using the hashtag #AGU13 on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
We hope that these additions will help make your Fall Meeting experience even more enjoyable, and we encourage you to share your ideas for how we can continue to grow and improve this amazing event.
Christine W. McEnteeExecutive Director/CEOAmerican Geophysical Union
Celebrating Scientific Excellence and the Spirit of Collaboration Over the next five days, AGU will offer Fall Meeting at-tendees an unparalleled platform to share cutting-edge research, engage one another in productive dialogues, and build the foundation for future collaboration.
Thanks to the efforts of the nearly 21,000 researchers who submitted abstracts, and the diligent work of this years program com-mittee, attendees will have access to more than 7000 oral and 14,000 poster presentations. In addition, this years General Sessions will include such pres-tigious speakers as Dr. James Hansen, who will present the Union Frontiers of Geophysics Lecture, and Senator Olympia J. Snowe, who will present the Presidential Forum. And this rich and robust program will be supplemented by a schedule of nearly 60 Town Hall meetings on topics ranging from improv-ing Earth and space science education to the future of government agency research programs, as well as a wide variety of skill building and informational workshops.
I am also pleased to note that, after a highly successful introduction during the 2012 meeting, we will be offering SWIRL sessions again this year. SWIRLs
are designed to promote interdisciplinary collaboration by linking related sessions across the various sections and topics, thus providing attendees with a guided walk through one of our six identified topics. The expanded SWIRL themes for 2013 include: Carbon Dioxide Sequestration; Characterizing Uncertainty; Dust and Aerosols; Computational Methods across Scales: from Personal to High Performance Platforms; Global Soils; and Urban Systems. In the program books meeting summary chart, you will find these sessions marked with a special icon; in the itinerary planner/mobile app, you will find them marked with the word SWIRL at the end of the session title.
In addition to the excellent scientific programming, this years Fall Meeting will also include a plethora of networking and career building opportunities, a revamped Honors program, and expanded virtual optionsincluding addi-tional live-streaming and video recording of select sessions. All of which are designed to help make this the best Fall Meeting ever.
On behalf of the entire Program Committee and the AGU meetings staff, I wish you a full and stimulating week!
Kathy A. HibbardFall Meeting Program Committee ChairAmerican Geophysical Union
This is What a Galvanized Community of Earth and Space Scientists Looks LikeWelcome to the American Geophysical Unions 46th annual Fall Meeting!
For the next week, the city of San Francisco will be filled to the rafters with the best and brightest minds in the Earth and space sciences. Luminaries will stand
shoulder-to-shoulder with students and young researchers at poster presen-tations and in crowded session rooms to learn about the latest breakthroughs. Scientists representing public and private institutions and government agen-cies from nearly 100 countries will gather during breaks, receptions, and even while riding the escalator to compare notes, discuss solutions, and identify areas for collaboration. Inevitably, someone will be so inspired that they feel compelled to rush into the hallway, find a spot of open floor (preferably close to a power outlet), whip out their laptop, and get to work.
This combination of excitement, enthusiasm, scientific excellence, and international networking for scientists in all career stages is what makes Fall Meeting such a special event. Our attendees are passionate about using their science to benefit humanityimproving lives, protecting safety, supporting
economic growth and stability, and fostering technological innovationand AGU is committed to giving that passion a platform on which to thrive.Of course Fall Meeting is about presenting pioneering advances in a wide variety of geophysical research disciplines. But its so much more that. Our sessions, town hall meetings, live webcasts, workshops, and networking events promote cross-disciplinary research, improved communication, and professional collaboration . . . and they empower attendees to go home and inform their communities about the excitement of Earth and space science and how it can contribute to advancing our common interests.
AGU is committed to galvanizing a community of Earth and space scientists that collaboratively advances and communicates science and its power to ensure a sustainable future. By attending the Fall Meeting, you are making an immeasurable contribution to our ability to achieve that vision.
I encourage you to participate in as many sessions and workshops as possible, ask questions and provide answers, introduce yourself to new people and reconnect with old friends, and above all, enjoy the Fall Meeting experience!
Carol FinnPresidentAmerican Geophysical Union
WELCOME TO THE AMERICAN GEOPHYSICAL UNIONS 46th ANNUAL FALL MEETING
2013 AGU FALL MEETING2
WELCOME LETTER FROM THE MAYOR
32013 AGU FALL MEETING
TABLE OF CONTENTSTABLE OF CONTENTS
NOTE
We recommend that you create emergency contact information in your cell phone listed as ICE (In Case of Emergency) for emergency purposes, if necessary.
EMERGENCY CONTACT
Attendees at Fall Meeting may be videographed and pho-tographed by AGU for archival and marketing purposes. Attendees are not allowed to photograph, video, or record information during scientific sessions.
Meetings Staff Brenda Weaver, Director of MeetingsJennifer Tomb, Assistant Director, Meetings OperationsCynthia Wilcox, Assistant Director, MeetingsSusanne Davison, Logistics ManagerNicole Oliphant, Scientific Programs ManagerHeather Nalley, Scientific Programs CoordinatorLynn Ervin, Senior Registration and Housing SpecialistShermonta Grant, Meetings Communications Program Manager Jalin Debeuneure, Administrative Assistant Haley Cox, Meetings Intern
Marketing and Creative Services StaffJill Treby, Assistant Director, Marketing and MembershipTekiyah Ward, Program Manager, MarketingMirelle Moscovitch, Program Manager, Marketing ContentValerie Bassett, Senior Graphics Specialist
Event Hours...............................................................4
Union Activities.............................................................6
Union Sessions.............................................................7
General Sessions........................................................9
SWIRLs...............................................................10-26
Events and Activities at a Glance........................28-34
AGU Special and Educational Events.................36-49
Product Theater Demos.............................................50
Section and Focus Group Lectures........................51-52
Virtual Options....................................................53-56
Town Halls.........................................................58-64
Program Committee............................................66-67
Meeting Services.................................................68-71
Hotel Map................................................................72
Restaurants..............................................................73
Getting Around....................................................74-75
Moscone Center Floor Plans................................76-81
Poster Hall Floor Plan..............................................82
InterContinental Floor Plans...............................83-84
Marriott Marquis Floor Plans....................................85
Exhibitor Profiles and Floor Plan........................86-114
Academic Showcase.............................................115-119
Meeting Summary Chart......................................121-214
Presenting Author Index......................................216-267
Advertiser Index..........................................................268
FPO for FSC
GENERAL INFORMATIONThis program book contains general meeting information, a meeting summary chart, and a presenting author index.
The Meeting Summary Chart provides a list of sessions by day, time, and discipline. Information includes the session number, title, start time, meeting room, type of session, and session cosponsors (pages 121214).
The Itinerary Planner allows attendees to view abstracts at agu-fm13.abstractcentral.com/planner.jsp.
The Presenting Author Index contains presenters names followed by the paper number that they are presenting (pages 216267).
Content in this program book is current as of 31 October 2013.
2013 AGU FALL MEETING4
REGISTRATION, SESSIONS, ExHIbITS, AND SPEAkER READY ROOM
Registration Moscone West, Level 1 Moscone North, Upper Lobby Sunday: 10:00 A.M.- 6:30 P.M. Monday: 6:00 A.M.- 7:30 P.M. Tuesday: 7:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Wednesday-Friday: 7:30 A.M.-5:00 P.M. Note: Attendees who received pre-mailed badge materials have the option of picking up program materials at the Marriott Marquis, 55 Fourth Street (diagonally across from Moscone West) Sunday: 10:00 A.M.-6:30 P.M. Monday: 6:00 A.M.-7:30 P.M. Scientific Sessions Oral Sessions Moscone South, Gateway and Esplanade Ballrooms Moscone West, Levels 2 and 3 Moscone North, Hall E* MondayFriday 8:00 A.M10:00 A.M. 10:20 A.M12:20 P.M. 1:40 P.M.3:40 P.M. 4:00 P.M.6:00 P.M. * General Sessions in Hall E will be held 12:30 P.M.-1:30 P.M.
Poster Sessions Moscone South, Halls AC MondayFriday 8:00 A.M12:20 P.M. 1:40 P.M.6:00 P.M.
Academic Showcase and Exhibits Moscone North, Exhibit Hall Monday: 6:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. TuesdayThursday: 9:30 A.M6:00 P.M. Friday: 9:30 A.M1:30 P.M.
AGU Marketplace Moscone North: Exhibit Hall Monday: 6:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. TuesdayThursday: 9:30 A.M6:00 P.M. Friday: 9:30 A.M1:30 P.M.
Speaker Ready Room Moscone West, Room 2001 Moscone South, Mezzanine, Room 204 Sunday: 10:00 A.M.-6:30 P.M. Monday: 6:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Tuesday: 7:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Wednesday-Thursday: 7:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M. Friday: 7:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.
52013 AGU FALL MEETING
MEDALISTSSpiro K. Antiochos
Mark A. CaneBradford H. Hager
Jesse H. KrollKuo-Nan Liou
Motohiko MurakamiRaymond G. Roble
Sonia I. SeneviratneSoroosh Sorooshian
Bernard J. Wood
FELLOWSZhisheng An
Christopher John BallentineAndrew BinleyGordon Bonan
Roland BrgmannPage Chamberlain
Allan H. DevolHerb DragertThomas Duffy
Cynthia EbingerRobert E. ErgunGraham Feingold
Katherine H. FreemanJoan GombergPhilip R. Goode
David C. GoodrichDenis Hatzfeld
Barbara Mary HickeyEileen E. Hofmann
Joseph HubaSusan E. Humphris
Catherine Louise JohnsonGregory C. Johnson
Paul R. KrehbielDavid W. LeaL. Ruby LeungLisa A. LevinPeter S. Liss
Natalie M. MahowaldAlan C. Mix
Russell MonsonJ. Casey Moore
Kenneth MopperAndrew A. NybladeKazushige Obara
Tim PalmerCharles K. PaullMichael Perfit
Donald K. PerovichJohn W. Pomeroy
Nancy N. RabalaisEric J. RignotDavid Rind
Andrew P. RobertsWilliam I. Rose
James M. Russell IIIChristopher Lee Sabine
John Selker
Jeff SeveringhausDonald I. SiegelRudy Slingerland
Chris SoulsbyBarbara J. Turpin
Bin WangWarren M. Washington
Paul WennbergPeter R. Wilcock
Warren Jackman WiscombeEllen Wohl
An YinPeter K. Zeitler
Keke Zhang
CLIMATE COMMUNICATION PRIZE RECIPIENT
Kevin E. Trenberth
UNION AWARDEESErna Akuginow
Tim FolgerJaime Urrutia Fucugauchi
Chelle L. GentemannGeoffrey Haines-Stiles
Solomon M. HsiangJohn L. LaBrecque
Tamara Shapiro LedleyIain StewartPaul Voosen
2013AMERICAN GEOPHYSICAL UNION
HONOREES
2013 AGU FALL MEETING6
UN
ION
AC
TIVI
TIES
Sunday, 8 December Session Chair Training Moscone West, Room 2001 4:30 P.M.-5:00 P.M. Have questions about your role as Session Chairperson? Join your colleagues for 30 minutes to learn more. Monday, 9 December AGU Presidential Forum: What's Gone Wrong in Washington and Why Does It Have to be This Way? Moscone North, Hall E 12:30 P.M.1:30 P.M. Presented by Senator Olympia J. Snowe (ME) U.S. Senate (1994-2012) Ice breaker Reception Moscone North, Exhibit Hall 6:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Join your colleagues, visit more than 200 exhibitors, and enjoy complimentary beer and soft drinks at this premier networking event.
Tuesday, 10 December Session Chair Training Moscone West, Room 2001 7:00 A.M.-7:30 A.M. Have questions about your role as Session Chairperson? Join your colleagues for 30 minutes to learn more.
Frontiers of Geophysics Lecture: Minimizing Irreversible Impacts of Human-Made Climate Change Moscone North, Hall E 12:30 P.M.1:30 P.M. Presented by James E. Hansen, adjunct professor at Columbia Universitys Earth Institute and former director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
Wednesday, 11 December Honors Tribute The Honors events will highlight the accomplishments of scientists in all fields of geophysics. The ceremony is open to all attendees followed by the banquet, which is a ticketed event. Plan to attend and pay tribute to the 2013 Union Awardees, Prize Recipient, Fellows, and Medalists.
Honors Ceremony Moscone North, Hall E 6:00 P.M.8:00 P.M. The ceremony is open to all meeting attendees.
Honors banquet The banquet will be held directly after the ceremony. San Francisco Marriott Marquis, Yerba Buena Ballroom, Salons 89 8:30 P.M.12:00 A.M. Tickets: $85.00 USD A night of elegance and entertainment to celebrate AGUs 2013 Union Awardees, Prize Recipient, Fellows, and Medalists. A cash bar will be available in the Honors Banquet Lounge.
Thursday, 12 December Union Agency Lecture Moscone North, Hall E 12:30 P.M.1:30 P.M. Presented by Sybil Seitzinger, Executive Director of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
UNION ACTIVITIES
72013 AGU FALL MEETING
UN
ION
SESSIONS
Monday, 9 December
U11A Mathematics of Planet Earth (Virtual Option)
U12A AGU Presidential Forum: AGU Presidential Forum: What's Gone Wrong in Washington and Why Does It Have to Be This Way? (Virtual Option)
U13A Global Nuclear Security: The Alliance of I nternational Policy and Science (Virtual Option)
Tuesday, 10 December
U21A Challenges and Opportunities for Energy Resource and Environmental Research (Virtual Option)
U22A IPCC Climate Change 2013: Assessment of the Future Future of the Assessment (Virtual Option)
U22B Your Science Can Make a Difference. Are You Up for it? AGUs Thriving Earth Exchange
U22C Union Frontiers of Geophysics Lecture: Minimizing Irreversible Impacts of Human-Made Climate Change (Virtual Option)
U23A Earth Science Instruments and Opportunities on the International Space Station (Virtual Option)
U24A Climate Literacy: The Role of the AGU Scientific Community in Climate Change Communication and Engagement (Virtual Option)
Wednesday, 11 December
U32A Water, Energy, and Food Security in a Changing World: Finding Solutions Through Integration of Physical and Social Sciences
U33A Atmospheric MethaneClimate Lever: Precambrian to Present (Virtual Option)
U34A Understanding and Monitoring Abrupt Climate Change and Its Impacts (Virtual Option)
Thursday, 12 December
U41A Big Data in the Earth and Space Sciences: The Real Challenges Are Accessibility and Usability (Virtual Option)
U42A Hydrometeorological Research at the Computational Frontier: Data-Intensive Prediction and Social Impact
Assessment of Natural Disasters (Virtual Option)
U43A Union Science for Solutions Lecture (Virtual Option)
U44A Remote Sensing of Earth System Variability and Change (Virtual Option)
Friday, 13 December
U51A Solutions for North American Water Security Challenges (Virtual Option: On-Demand Only)
U52A 400ppm CO2: Communicating Climate Science Effectively (Virtual Option: On-Demand Only)
U53A Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty Organization
UNION SESSIONSUnion Sessions are for the benefit of attendees who have broad interests outside of their own disciplines. View the meeting schedule on pages 121-214 for session times and locations.
Sessions that are a part of a SWIRL are indicated with the color logo. See more details about SWIRLS on pages 10-26.
2013 AGU FALL MEETING8
GRAD STUDENTS:
Spend your summer in a
newsroom as an AGU-sponsored
Mass Media Fellow!
news.agu.org/mass-media-fellowship/
013_1581
Apply by 15 January
by Friday,13 December, 6:00 P.M. EST
REMEMBER TO UPLOADYour ePoster
fallmeeting.agu.org
92013 AGU FALL MEETING
GENERAL
SESSIONS
GENERAL SESSIONSAn Inside Look
Senator Olympia J. SnoweU12A AGU Presidential Forum: What's Gone Wrong in Washington and Why Does It Have to be This Way? Monday, 9 December, 12:30 P.M.-1:30 P.M. Moscone North, Hall E With her election in 1994, Olympia J. Snowe became only the second woman Senator in history to represent Maine, a position she held until 2012. Before her election to the Senate, Snowe represented Maines Second Congressional District in the U.S. House of Representatives for sixteen years. Her dedicated work in the U.S. Senate garnered her nationwide recognition
as a leading policymaker in Washington. In 2005, she was named the 54th most powerful woman in the world by Forbes magazine. In 2006, Time magazine named her one of the top ten U.S. Senators. Calling her The Caretaker, it wrote of Snowe: Because of her centrist views and eagerness to get beyond partisan point scoring, Maine Republican Olympia Snowe is in the center of every policy debate in Washington; but while Snowe is a major player on national issues, she is also known as one of the most effective advocates for her constituents.
Dr. James E. HansenU22C Union Frontiers of Geophysics Lecture: Minimizing Irreversible Impacts of Human-Made Climate ChangeTuesday, 10 December, 12:30 P.M.-1:30 P.M. Moscone North, Hall E James E. Hansen, formerly director of the NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, is adjunct professor and at Columbia Universitys Earth Institute, where he directs a program in Climate Science, Awareness and Solutions. He was trained in physics and astronomy in the space science program of Dr. James Van Allen at the University of Iowa.
Hansens early research on the clouds of Venus helped identify their composition as sulfuric acid. Since the late 1970s, he has focused his research on Earths climate, especially human-made climate change. Hansen is best known for his testimony on climate change to congressional committees in the 1980s that helped raise broad awareness of the global warming issue. Hansen was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 1995 and was designated by Time magazine in 2006 as one of the 100 most influential people on Earth. He has received numerous awards, including the Carl-Gustaf Rossby Research Medal, the Roger Revelle Medal, the Sophie Prize, and the Blue Planet Prize. Hansen is recognized for speaking truth to power, for identifying ineffectual policies as greenwash, and for outlining actions that the public must take to protect the future of young people and other life on our planet.
Sybil SeitzingerU42b Union Agency Lecture Thursday, 12 December, 12:30 P.M.-1:30 P.M. Moscone North, Hall E Sybil Seitzinger, Executive Director of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Program at the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, is an international leader in investigating the causes and consequences of environmental change.
A pioneering scientist who recently served as president of the American Society of Limnology and Oceanography (ASLO), Seitzinger is former director of the
Rutgers/NOAA Cooperative Marine Education and Research Program, is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has served on numerous national and international advisory committees.
2013 AGU FALL MEETING10
SWIR
LS
SWIRLsAGU has created a path for interdisciplinary collaboration at Fall Meeting. The Program Committee has identified, linked, and organized select sessions from the various sections into themes. These themes,
called SWIRLs, provide Fall Meeting attendees with an interdisciplinary walk through the week.
A daily CO2 value above 400 ppm was recorded at the Mauna Loa observatory for the first time in 2013. The question of whether future warming can be avoided through emissions reductions has important implications for all aspects of human society, and geologic sequestration of CO2 may be critical for mitigating emissions while meeting growing global energy demand. Multidisci-plinary studies are identifying sites for safe long-term storage, examining chemical reactions that occur during multiphase flow in potential host materials over a wide range of spatial scales, and developing technologies for injecting supercritical CO2 into the pore space of subsurface rock res-ervoirs. This SWIRL theme will include sessions that address the geochemical, biogeochemical, hydrologic, and geophysical issues underlying geologic carbon sequestration.
Carbon Dioxide Sequestration
GC11C Cutting-Edge Challenges in Climate Change Science I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H11M Coupled Hydraulic, Geochemi-cal, and Geomechanical Processes in CO2 Injection and Storage I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
OS11E Fluid Conduits and biogeo-chemical Impacts of Sub-seabed Carbon Storage (CCS) Leakage I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3009
GC12b Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
H12C Coupled Hydraulic, Geochemical, and Geomechanical Processes in CO2 Injection and Storage II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
OS12A Fluid Conduits and biogeo-chemical Impacts of Sub-seabed Carbon Storage (CCS) Leakage II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3009
Monday, 9 December
MORNING
AFTERNOONb13A bioclogging and biocementation of Subsurface Environments: Experimental Observations and Modeling Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC13C Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H13M Coupled Hydraulic, Geochemical, and Geomechanical Processes in CO2 Injection and Storage III 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
OS13A Fluid Conduits and biogeo-chemical Impacts of Sub-seabed Car-bon Storage (CCS) Leakage III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
Tuesday, 10 December
MORNING GC21F Cutting-Edge Challenges in Climate Change Science II 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
H21L Coupled Hydraulic, Geochemical, and Geomechanical Processes in CO2
Injection and Storage IV 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
MR22A Mechanisms of Mineral Carbonation, Hydration and Oxidation, With Potential Applications Including
Carbon Capture and Storage I 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 301
AFTERNOON
H23b Coupled Hydraulic, Geochemical, and Geomechanical Processes in CO2 Injection and Storage V Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
S23E Geophysical Monitoring for Geo-logic Carbon Storage I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 309
112013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
Wednesday, 11 December
MORNING
V31D Geochemistry of Geologic Carbon Sequestration: Mineral-H20-CO2 Geo-chemistry and Other Topics I (cospon-sored by EGU-GMPV and MSA) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3005
AFTERNOON
GC33C Ex Situ Carbon Mineralization I Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
MR33b Mechanisms of Mineral Carbonation, Hydration and Oxidation, With Potential Applications Including
Carbon Capture and Storage II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
S33C Geophysical Monitoring for Geologic Carbon Storage II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
V34A Geochemistry of Geologic Carbon Sequestration: Upscaling and Natural Analogues II (Virtual Option) (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV and MSA) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
Thursday, 12 December
MORNING
GC41A Taking the Temperature of the Earth: Challenges and Applications Across All Earth Surface Domains I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
V41A Geochemistry of Geologic Carbon Sequestration III Posters (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV and MSA) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC42C Ex Situ Carbon Mineralization II (Virtual Option)10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
AFTERNOON
GC43F Taking the Temperature of the Earth: Challenges and Applications Across All Earth Surface Domains II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
Friday, 13 December
MORNING GC51A Understanding 400 ppm Climate: Past, Present and Future I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
AFTERNOON GC53C Understanding 400 ppm Climate: Past, Present and Future II (Virtual Option: On-Demand Only)1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 103
2013 AGU FALL MEETING12
SWIR
LS
It is important to recognize that uncertainty has at least two different aspects that are important for interdisciplinary science. One is the analytical and numerical quantification of uncertainty, such as the variability of observed results compared to simulated results, how we estimate model bias or error, and the difference in model outcomes that do and do not include critical processes in their framework. The other is that qualitative uncertainty is a significant component in our understanding of issues like evaluating decision criteria that can be used when implementing new policy or infra-structure and social/cultural responses to new and existing policies. This SWIRL theme will include sessions that discuss the quantification of uncertainty as well as qualitative assessments of legal issues and strategies for science communications.
Characterizing Uncertainty
Monday, 9 December
A11I Remote Sensing of CO2 and CH4: From Missions to ScienceRemote Sensing of Carbon Cycle Science I (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
A11J Subseasonal to Seasonal Prediction: bridging the Gap between Weather and Climate I (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
b11E Model Intercomparisons: Syntheses That Inform Scientific Understanding I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI11A Seismic Anisotropy: Predictions, Observations, and Interpretations I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG11A Statistical Geophysics: Natural Hazards and Fracking I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A12A Climate Sensitivity and Feedbacks: Advances and New Paradigms II (cosponsored by AMS) 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
A12C Remote Sensing of CO2 and CH4: From Missions to Science Geostationary Observations II (cosponsored by AMS) 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
NG12A Non-Gaussian and Non-Linear Aspects of Data Assimilation/Fusion and Predictability I (Virtual Option) 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 102
MORNING
AFTERNOONA13E Subseasonal to Seasonal Prediction: bridging the Gap between Weather and Climate II Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A13H Climate Sensitivity and Feed-backs: Advances and New Paradigms I (cosponsored by AMS)1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
A13k Remote Sensing of CO2 and CH4: From Missions to Science Carbon Cycle Science Drivers III (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
b13M Model Intercomparisons: Syntheses That Inform Scientific Understanding II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2006
DI13A Linking the Earths Surface With the Deep Interior: Comparing Predictions and Observations of Mantle Plumes I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
NG13A Statistical Geophysics: Natural Hazards and Fracking II (Virtual Option)1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
PA13C Unsolved and Emerging Problems in Water Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H14G Uncertainty in Water Manage-ment, Part 2: Risk Analysis, Decision Support and Law, With Special Focus on Hydrometeorological Scaling From Continents to Watersheds I 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3020
NG14A Natural Turbulence From Centimeters to Megameters I 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 102
PA14A Hydraulic Fracturing: knowns, Unknowns, and Communication to the Public I (Virtual Option) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
132013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
Tuesday, 10 December
MORNING A21b Climate Sensitivity and Feedbacks: Advances and New Paradigms III Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A21G Remote Sensing of CO2 and CH4: From Missions to Science IV Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b21E Carbon and Water Cycling in Managed Forests I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2000
DI21A Linking the Earths Surface With the Deep Interior: Comparing Predictions and Observations of Mantle Plumes II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI21C Seismic Anisotropy: Predictions, Observations, and Interpretations II 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 303
G21A Pushing the Frontiers of Geodesy: Detection of New Phenomena Through Advances in Geodetic Time Series Analy-sis and Corrections I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H21H Uncertainty in Water Manage-ment, Part I: Uncertainty Quantifica-tion, Sensitivity Analysis and Experi-mental Design I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H21I Uncertainty in Water Manage-ment, Part 2: Risk Analysis, Decision Support and Law, With Special Focus on Hydrometeorological Scaling From Continents to Watersheds II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
IN21C New Approaches for Pattern Recognition and Change Detection I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG21A Non-Gaussian and Non-Linear Aspects of Data Assimilation/Fusion and Predictability II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
PA21A Hydraulic Fracturing: knowns, Unknowns, and Communication to the Public II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
PA21b Why Should We Talk About What We Dont know? Implications of
Communicating Scientific Uncertainty I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
S21b Advances in Nuclear Test Mon-itoring From Multiple Technologies I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b22G biosphere-Atmosphere Exchange, biosynthesis, and Oxidation of Volatile Organic Compounds Across Terrestrial and Marine Ecosystems I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
DI22A Seismic Anisotropy: Predictions, Observations, and Interpretations III 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 303
EP22b Path-Dependence and Hysteresis in Earth-Surface Dynamics I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
P22A Characterizing Small Solar System bodies I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2007
AFTERNOONb23A biosphere-Atmosphere Exchange, biosynthesis, and Oxidation of Volatile Organic Compounds Across Terrestrial and Marine Ecosystems II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b23b Carbon and Water Cycling in Managed Forests II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI23b Geophysical Observations and Models of Subduction I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
G23C Pushing the Frontiers of Geodesy: Detection of New Phenomena Through Advances in Geodetic Time Series Analy-sis and Corrections II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3024
H23O Uncertainty in Water Manage-ment, Part I: Uncertainty Quantifica-tion, Sensitivity Analysis and Experi-mental Design II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3022
NG23A Natural Turbulence From Cen-timeters to Megameters II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG23b Unification of Alternative Models in Climate and Geophysics via Multi-Model Ensembles, Stochastic Parameterization, and Networks I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
PA23A Why Should We Talk About What We Dont know? Implications of Com-municating Scientific Uncertainty II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2000
PP23D Climate Variability From Multiple Reconstructions I1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
P23A Characterizing Small Solar System bodies II Posters1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
S23D Advances in Nuclear Test Moni-toring From Multiple Technologies II 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 307
V23b Uncertainty in Natural Hazard Assessment: Volcanoes, Earthquakes, Wildfires, and Weather Phenomena Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b24b Quantifying Uncertainty in biogeochemical Studies I4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2002
DI24A Geophysical Observations and Models of Subduction II 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
H24F Uncertainty in Water Manage-ment, Part I: Uncertainty Quantifica-tion, Sensitivity Analysis and Experi-mental Design III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3022
IN24b New Approaches for Pattern Recognition and Change Detection II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2020
NG24A Extreme Events, Stochasticity and Multiscaling I 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
PP24A Climate Variability From Multiple Reconstructions II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
S24b Advances in Nuclear Test Monitor-ing From Multiple Technologies III 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 307
2013 AGU FALL MEETING14
SWIR
LSWednesday, 11 December
A31E Novel Application of Observa-tions to the Evaluation of Regional Climate Models I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A31G Uncertainty Estimations of Highly Resolved Urban Emissions Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b31b Quantifying Uncertainty in biogeochemical Studies II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC31b Uncertainty Quantification of Climate Change, Earth System, and Integrated Assessment Models I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI31A State of the Art in Computa-tional Geoscience I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H31C Managing and Modeling for Water Security I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H31I best Practices in Model Verifica-tion and Uncertainty Analysis across Earths Dynamic Systems I (Virtual Option) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
NG31A Unification of Alternative Models in Climate and Geophysics via Multi-Model Ensembles, Stochastic Parameterization, and Networks II Posters8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
PP31A Climate Variability From Multiple Reconstructions III Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A32E Advances in Atmospheric Inverse Modeling of Land-Atmo sphere Exchange Processes I (cosponsored by AMS) 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
H32G best Practices in Model Verifi-cation and Uncertainty Analysis across Earths Dynamic Systems II (Virtual Option) 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
NG32A Maths of Planet Earth: Synegies, big Data, Inverse Methods and Scaling I 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 300
MORNING
AFTERNOONA33A Advances in Atmospheric Inverse Modeling of Land-Atmosphere Exchange Processes II Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b33M Multisensor Long-Term Land Surface Data Records I 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2006
DI33A Geophysical Observations and Models of Subduction III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
EP33E Fluvial Sediment budgets: Can We Do better? I 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2003
GC33E Uncertainty Quantification of Climate Change, Earth System, and Integrated Assessment Models II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
H33A Advances in Ecohydraulics and biogeomorphology: Coupling System Processes Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H33b best Practices in Model Verifi-cation and Uncertainty Analysis across Earths Dynamic Systems III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C H33D Cracking the Conundrum of Soil Measurement: Strategies and Instru-ments Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H33J Information and Uncertainty in Data and Models: Toward a Common Framework for Model building and Prediction II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3014
NG33A Extreme Events, Stochasticity and Multiscaling II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG33b Pattern Formation and Nonlinear and Scaling Geoprocesses: From Microscale to the Climate I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
b34b Understanding Uncertainty in Remotely Sensed Vegetation Data Products I 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
DI34b State of the Art in Computa-tional Geoscience II 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 305
EP34C Fluvial Sediment budgets: Can We Do better? II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2003
GC34C Uncertainty Quantification of Climate Change, Earth System, and Integrated Assessment Models III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
H34b Information and Uncertainty in Data and Models: Toward a Common Framework for Model building and Prediction III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3014
H34C Managing and Modeling for Water Security II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3009
MORNING
A41C Cloud Properties: Observations and Their Uncertainties I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A41H Tropospheric Chemistry- Climate Interactions I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b41D Multisensor Long-Term Land Surface Data Records II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
Thursday, 12 December
152013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
AFTERNOON A43H Cloud Properties: Observations and Their Uncertainties II (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
A43L Tropospheric Chemistry-Climate Interactions II (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
EP43b Fluvial Sediment budgets: Can We Do better? III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
EP43F From Grains to Landscapes: Understanding the Links between Surface Topography, Fluid Mechanics, and Sediment Transport I 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2005
GC43A Future Land Use Change and Climate III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC43D How Reliable and Accurate are CMIP5 Climate Simulations? III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC43G How Reliable and Accurate are CMIP5 Climate Simulations? II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
NH43D Climate Change Effects on Natural Hazards: Science, Communi-cation and Policy I (Virtual Option) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
NG43A Pattern Formation and Non-linear and Scaling Geoprocesses: From
Microscale to the Climate II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A44b Cloud Properties: Observations and Their Uncertainties III (cospon-sored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
A44G Tropospheric Chemistry-Climate Interactions III (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
EP44b From Grains to Landscapes: Understanding the Links between Sur-face Topography, Fluid Mechanics, and Sediment Transport II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2005
Friday, 13 December
MORNING b51L New Mechanisms, Feedbacks, and Approaches for Improving Predic-tions of the Global Carbon Cycle in Earth System Models I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2006
H51D Conventional and Enhanced Geothermal Systems: Characterization, Stimulation, Simulation and Seismicity I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H51O Characterization and Modeling of Fracture/Fault Systems and Uncer-tainty Quantification I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
NH51b Climate Change Effects on Natural Hazards: Science, Communi-cation and Policy II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
PP51A Climate of the Common Era III Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b52C New Mechanisms, Feedbacks, and Approaches for Improving Predic-tions of the Global Carbon Cycle in Earth System Models II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2006
AFTERNOON A53b Atmospheric Reanalysis: Developments and Verifica-tion Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A53N Novel Application of Observations to the Evaluation of Regional Climate Models II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3014
b53C New Mechanisms, Feedbacks, and Approaches for Improving Predictions of the Global Carbon Cycle in Earth System Models III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
EP53b From Grains to Landscapes: Understanding the Links between Surface Topography, Fluid Mechanics, and
Sediment Transport III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
EP53D Path-Dependence and Hysteresis in Earth-Surface Dynamics II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H53A Characterization and Modeling of Fracture/Fault Systems and Uncertainty Quantification II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H54b Conventional and Enhanced Geothermal Systems: Characterization, Stimulation, Simulation and Seismicity II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
b41E Understanding Uncertainty in Remotely Sensed Vegetation Data Products II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
C41C Uncertainty in Snow Measure-ments and Modeling: Influence on Understanding the Cryosphere Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC41D Future Land Use Change and Climate I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
H41G Information and Uncertainty in Data and Models: Toward a Common Framework for Model building and Prediction I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG41A Maths of Planet Earth: Synegies, big Data, Inverse Methods and Scaling II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
PP41b Climate of the Common Era I8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2008
GC42A Future Land Use Change and Climate II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
GC42b How Reliable and Accurate are CMIP5 Climate Simulations? I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
PP42A Climate of the Common Era II10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2008
2013 AGU FALL MEETING16
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The Computational Methods SWIRL takes several perspectives on computing across scales. Sessions for this SWIRL could consider computing from the personal and hyperlocal scales to how well can we actually observe reality with smart sensors at community to global scales. Another axis of computational methods plays on the old does not compute meme. Do we truly and deeply understand what our computations tell us or is there some kind of deep impedance mismatch? In addition to the underlying validity and veracity questions, Computational methods could also touch on how computing is inherently a simplification process: big data, long data, cloud computing and supercomputers notwithstanding. A final reality of computational methods could touch on what does it mean that people have increasing access to a web of data and a web of information? Does that make a tablet or a smartphone a passport for digital natives?
DI11A Seismic Anisotropy: Predic-tions, Observations, and Interpreta-tions I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG11A Statistical Geophysics: Natural Hazards and Fracking I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
U11A Mathematics of Planet Earth (Virtual Option) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 102
V12A The Geoinformatics Revolution: Data-Driven Science, Databases, and Data Systems for Thermodynamics and Geochemical and Geophysical Modeling I (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV and MSA) 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 306
Monday, 9 December
MORNING
AFTERNOON DI13A Linking the Earths Surface With the Deep Interior: Comparing Predictions and Observations of Mantle Plumes I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
ED13H Games, Interactive Simulations, and Virtual Labs for Science Teaching and Learning I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
NG13A Statistical Geophysics: Natural Hazards and Fracking II (Virtual Option) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3002
V13A The Geoinformatics Revolution: Data-Driven Science, Databases, and Data Systems for Thermodynamics and Geochem-ical and Geophysical Modeling II Posters (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV and MSA) 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
ED14C Games, Interactive Simula-tions, and Virtual Labs for Science Teaching and Learning II 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
NG14A Natural Turbulence From Centimeters to Megameters I 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 102
Tuesday, 10 December
MORNING DI21A Linking the Earths Surface With the Deep Interior: Comparing Predictions and Observations of Mantle Plumes II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI21C Seismic Anisotropy: Predictions, Observations, and Interpretations II 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 303
H21M High Resolution Hydrologic Modeling: Challenges and Avenues for Development I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3016
IN21D big Data Analytic Systems: Computing and Collaborating Effec-tively in Distributed Systems I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2020
S21E Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Mantle I 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 305
DI22A Seismic Anisotropy: Predictions, Observations, and Interpretations III 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 303
S22b Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Theory II 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 305
Computational Methods across Scales: Personal to High Performance Platforms
172013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
A23C Effects of Aerosol on Convective Clouds Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI23A Probing the Earths Interior I Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI23b Geophysical Observations and Models of Subduction I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
ED23C Games, Interactive Simula-tions, and Virtual Labs for Science Teaching and Learning III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H23E High Resolution Hydrologic Modeling: Challenges and Avenues for Development II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
IN23A big Data Analytic Systems: Computing and Collaborating Effectively in Distributed Systems II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
MR23A Computational Advances and Applications in Mineral Physics I Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG23A Natural Turbulence From Cen-timeters to Megameters II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG23b Unification of Alternative Models in Climate and Geophysics via Multi-Model Ensembles, Stochastic Parameterization, and Networks I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
S23A Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Shallow/Industry III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI24A Geophysical Observations and Models of Subduction II 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
NG24A Extreme Events, Stochasticity and Multiscaling I 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
Wednesday, 11 December
MORNING
A31H Advances in Numerical Methods for Atmosphere and Ocean Modeling I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
DI31A State of the Art in Computa-tional Geoscience I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H31E Pore Structure, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transport in Porous Media I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG31A Unification of Alternative Models in Climate and Geophysics via Multi-Model Ensembles, Stochastic Parameterization, and Networks II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
OS31E Remote Sensing and High-Resolution Imaging of Coastal and Deep Marine Environments Utiliz-ing Deep-Water and Airborne Surveying Vehicles I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3009
S31D Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Global IV 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 305
T31C Geodynamic Modeling of Lith-osphere Deformation: Advances and Challenges I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG32A Maths of Planet Earth: Syne-gies, big Data, Inverse Methods and Scaling I 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 300
S32b Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Shallow V 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 305
AFTERNOON A33b Advances in Numerical Methods for Atmosphere and Ocean Modeling II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI33A Geophysical Observations and Models of Subduction III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI33C Probing the Earths Interior II 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
H33L Pore Structure, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transport in Porous Media II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
NG33A Extreme Events, Stochasticity and Multiscaling II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NG33b Pattern Formation and Nonlin-ear and Scaling Geoprocesses: From Microscale to the Climate I 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 300
OS33A Remote Sensing and High-Res-olution Imaging of Coastal and Deep Marine Environments Utilizing Deep-Water and Airborne Surveying Vehicles II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
S33A Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Mantle/Global/Theory VI Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
T33E Geodynamic Modeling of Lith-osphere Deformation: Advances and Challenges II 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 302
b34A Low- and No-Altitude Remote Sensing: Innovative Systems and Applications I 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2006
DI34A Probing the Earths Interior III 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
DI34b State of the Art in Computa-tional Geoscience II 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 305
H34E Pore Structure, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transport in Porous Media III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
AFTERNOON
2013 AGU FALL MEETING18
SWIR
LSThursday, 12 December
MORNING b41b Low- and No-Altitude Remote Sensing: Innovative Systems and Applications II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI41b New Constraints on the Structure and Dynamics of the Lower Mantle I 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 303
GC41b Closing the Loop: Integrating Socio-Economic and Climate Scenarios in the Assessment of Global Change Impacts I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC41C Regional Climate Impact Studies from CMIP5 Ensemble Model Results I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC41E General Circulation Model Downscaling for Impact, Vulnerability
and Adaption Assessments: Methodol-ogies and Applications I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
H41P Pore Structure, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transport in Porous Media IV 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
NG41A Maths of Planet Earth: Syne-gies, big Data, Inverse Methods and Scaling II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
S41D Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Industry VII 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 305
U41A big Data in the Earth and Space Sciences: The Real Challenges Are Accessibility and Usability (Virtual Option) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 102
DI42A New Constraints on the Structure and Dynamics of the Lower Mantle II 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 303
GC42b How Reliable and Accurate are CMIP5 Climate Simulations? I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
H42D Pore Structure, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transport in Porous Media V 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
PA42A Communicating the Relation-ship between Policy Sciences, Natural Hazards, and Global Environmental Change 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2020
S42C Advances in Seismic Imaging: Toward Integrated GeoModels on All Scales Data/Arrays VIII 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 305
AFTERNOON GC43C General Circulation Model Downscaling for Impact, Vulnerability and Adaption Assessments: Methodol-ogies and Applications II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC43D How Reliable and Accurate are CMIP5 Climate Simulations? III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC43E Stephen Schneider Lecture: What Should a Climate Scientist Advo-cate for? The Intersection of Expertise and Values in a Politicized World (Virtual Option) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2022
GC43G How Reliable and Accurate are CMIP5 Climate Simulations? II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
H43F Pore Structure, Fluid Flow, and Mass Transport in Porous Media VI Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
MR43b Computational Advances and Applications in Mineral Physics II 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 303
NG43A Pattern Formation and Nonlin-ear and Scaling Geoprocesses: From Microscale to the Climate II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC44b Closing the Loop: Integrating Socio-Economic and Climate Scenarios in the Assessment of Global Change Impacts II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
GC44C Regional Climate Impact Studies from CMIP5 Ensemble Model Results II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
H44D Hydrogeophysical Data Integra-tion and Joint Inversion I 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3014
192013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
Friday, 13 December
MORNING b51b bridging Scales in Soil-Plant- Atmosphere Interactions I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b51G Phenology as both Forcing and Response: Integrating Measurements and Models Across Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystems I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
DI51A New Constraints on the Structure and Dynamics of the Lower Mantle III Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
ED51A Era of Citizen Science: Intersection of Outreach, Scientific Research and big Data I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
ED51b Strategies and Innovations in Communicating and Educating the Public about Earth Science Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
ED51D Era of Citizen Science: Intersection of Outreach, Scientific Research and big Data II 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2016
H51G Hydrogeophysical Data Integra-tion and Joint Inversion II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H51P Global Floods: Satellite Obser-vation, Modeling and Socioeconomic Response I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3022
IN51C Adopting Cloud Computing for Environmental Decision Support Systems I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
AFTERNOON b53F Phenology as both Forcing and Response: Integrating Measurements and Models Across Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecosystems II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2000
H53D Global Floods: Satellite Obser-vation, Modeling and Socioeconomic
Response II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
IN53A Adopting Cloud Computing for Environmental Decision Support Systems II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b54A bridging Scales in Soil-Plant- Atmosphere Interactions II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2000
2013 AGU FALL MEETING20
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Natural and human contributions of dust and aerosols are critical to understanding climate and Earth system dynamics. In addition, dust and aerosols are important for understanding the atmospheric dynamics on other planets, such as Mars, Venus, the Moon, and other orbiting bodies, as well as con-tributions to deep Earth dynamics in volcanic systems with regard to tephrochronology and pyroclastic investigations into tracing volcanic eruptions. This SWIRL theme provides a path for: the paleo past; contributions to the atmosphere, including contemporary regional monsoonal, high-latitude, south Asian and African dust and aerosol generation and transport; planetary evolution; the Rosetta encounter; and how dust and aerosols contribute to our understanding of processes and mechanisms in volcanology.
Dust and Aerosols
A11b biological Aerosols: Character-ization, Identification, Environmental Impacts Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A11D Marine Trace Gases and Aerosols I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A11H From Air Pollution to Climate Changes in Asia I (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3008
PP11b Aeolian Dust in Earths Climate System I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
SA11b Impacts of Cosmic Dust in Planetary Atmospheres I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A12b From Air Pollution to Climate Changes in Asia II (cosponsored by AMS) 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3008
Monday, 9 December
MORNING
AFTERNOONA13J From Air Pollution to Climate Changes in Asia III (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3008
PP13D Aeolian Dust in Earths Climate System II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
SA13C Impacts of Cosmic Dust in Planetary Atmospheres II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2011
A14b From Air Pollution to Climate Changes in Asia IV (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3008
A14C Marine Trace Gases and Aerosols II (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
Tuesday, 10 December
MORNING A21A Climate and Atmospheric/Ocean Chemistry of the Tropical Eastern Atlantic: Recent Investigations Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A21C From Air Pollution to Climate Changes in Asia Posters V (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A21D Meso-scale Aerosol Processes, Comparison and Validation Studies
from DRAGON Networks within AER-ONET I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A21F Recent Advances in Spectro-pola-rimetric Studies of Aerosols, Clouds, and Earths Surface Properties I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A21J Marine Trace Gases and Aerosols III (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
P21b Planetary Atmospheres and Evolution I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
V21D Volcanic Flows, blows and the Atmosphere: Effusive-Explosive Erup-tion Dynamics and Ash Cloud Processes I (Virtual Option) (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 104
AFTERNOONP23G Planetary Atmospheres and Evolution II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2007
P23H Rosetta, Comets, and the Origins of the Solar System I 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2005
V23C Volcanic Flows, blows and the Atmosphere: Effusive-Explosive Erup-tion Dynamics and Ash Cloud Processes II Posters
(cosponsored by EGU-GMPV) 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A24C Meso-scale Aerosol Processes, Comparison and Validation Studies from DRAGON Networks within AERONET II (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
A24E Recent Advances in Spectro- polarimetric Studies of Aerosols,
Clouds, and Earths Surface Properties II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3004
P24A First Results of C/2012 S1 (ISON): Comet of the Century? I (Virtual Option) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2022
P24b Planetary Atmospheres and Evolution III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2007
212013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
Wednesday, 11 December
MORNING
A31D Molecular Chemistry and Physicochemical Properties of Organic Aerosols I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A31k Meso-scale Aerosol Processes, Comparison and Validation Studies from DRAGON Networks within AERONET III (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
P31A First Results of C/2012 S1 (ISON): Comet of the Century? II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P31b Rosetta, Comets, and the Ori-gins of the Solar System II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P31C Dynamic Mars from Long-Term Observations I (Virtual Option) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2022
V31G Volcanic Flows, blows and the Atmosphere: Effusive-Explosive Erup-tion Dynamics and Ash Cloud Process-es III (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 308
A32C The Southern Ocean: Clouds, Aerosols, and the Air-Sea Interface I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
P32A Dynamic Processes in Marss Atmosphere I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2007
P32b Solar System Dusty Plasma I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2005
V32D Volcanic Flows, blows and the Atmosphere: Effusive-Explosive Eruption Dynamics and Ash Cloud Processes IV (cosponsored by EGU-GMPV) 10:20 A.M., Moscone South, Room 308
AFTERNOONA33D Chemical Imaging Analysis of Atmospheric Particles I Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A33I Molecular Chemistry and Phys-icochemical Properties of Organic
Aerosols II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
A34b Molecular Chemistry and Physi-cochemical Properties of Organic
Aerosols III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
P34b Icy bodies: From Laboratory to Space Missions I 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2011
Thursday 12 December
MORNING
A41D Constraining Aerosol Indirect Forcing in Climate Models With Observations I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A41E Fog: Atmosphere, biosphere, Land, and Ocean Interactions I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A41G Mineral Dust Aerosols: From Small-Scale Insights to Large-Scale Understanding I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
C41D Dust and black Carbon in the Cryosphere I (Virtual Option) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Room 103
P41A Dynamic Mars from Long-Term Observations II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P41C Dynamic Processes in Marss Atmosphere II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P41E Icy bodies: From Laboratory to Space Missions II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P41G Solar System Dusty Plasma II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P42b Polarimetry as an Invaluable Tool to Study the Solar System and beyond I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2009
AFTERNOONA43D Multi-sensor and Model Aerosol Data Synergy for Climate and Air Quality Applications I Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A43G The Southern Ocean: Clouds, Aero-sols, and the Air-Sea Interface II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
C43b Dust and black Carbon in the Cryosphere II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
P43b Polarimetry as an Invaluable Tool to Study the Solar System and beyond II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A44D Fog: Atmosphere, biosphere, Land, and Ocean Interactions II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
2013 AGU FALL MEETING22
SWIR
LSFriday, 13 December
MORNING
A51A Aerosols above Clouds I Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A51D Multiphase Chemistry: Impacts on Aerosol Formation and Processing and on the budgets of Trace Gases I Posters (cosponsored by AMS)8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A51k Mineral Dust Aerosols: From Small-Scale Insights to Large-Scale Un-derstanding II (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
A51L Multi-sensor and Model Aerosol Data Synergy for Climate and Air Quality Applications I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
P51I Titans Enigmatic Atmosphere and Ionosphere I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2007
A52D Mineral Dust Aerosols: From Small-Scale Insights to Large-Scale Understanding III (cosponsored by AMS) 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
AFTERNOONA53J Mineral Dust Aerosols: From Small-Scale Insights to Large-Scale Understanding IV (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
A53k Multi-sensor and Model Aerosol Data Synergy for Climate and Air Quality Applications II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3001
A53L Multiphase Chemistry: Impacts on Aerosol Formation and Processing and on the budgets of Trace Gases II (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
P53C Titans Enigmatic Atmosphere and Ionosphere II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
A54A Aerosols Above Clouds II (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3012
A54C Chemical Imaging Analysis of Atmospheric Particles II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3014
A54E Constraining Aerosol Indirect Forcing in Climate Models with Observations II (Virtual Option: On-Demand Only) (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2022
A54G Multiphase Chemistry: Impacts on Aerosol Formation and Processing and on the budgets of Trace Gases III (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3006
232013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
Soils are part of the Critical Zone, and are both responders and drivers of the most critical envi-ronmental changes facing the earth during the Anthropocene. Controls on soil organic matter and C-cycling processes have dominated these discipline-specific sessions. The soils SWIRL accounts for all aspects of the complexity of the soil system including erosion, dust production, soils in water transport and chemistry, isotopic analyses, pedogenic processes affected by volcanism, physical, chemical and biological composition, fertility, greenhouse gas production, and weathering. The soils SWIRL theme will provide bridges of interdisciplinarity and communication across the AGU membership to characterize and quantify soil processes from microbial to pedogenic scales.
Global Soils
b11C Linking Geomorphology to biogeochemistry and Nutrient Cycles I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b11J Stability of Deep Soil Organic Carbon and Its Vulnerability to Global Change I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
H11G Measurement and Modeling of Root-Zone Processes Influencing Water, Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles at Various Scales I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H11I Saturated and Unsaturated Flow in Structurally Variable Pathways Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H11L Advances in Understanding Land-Atmosphere Interactions I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3022
PP11E Sensitivity of Peatland Carbon balance to Climate Change: Past and Future I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
b12D Vulnerability of Permafrost Carbon to Climate Change I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
H12b Advances in Understanding Land-Atmosphere Interactions II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3022
PP12b Sensitivity of Peatland Carbon balance to Climate Change: Past and Future II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2010
Monday, 9 December
MORNING
AFTERNOON
b13H Stability of Deep Soil Organic Carbon and Its Vulnerability to Global Change II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b13L Linking Geomorphology to bio-geochemistry and Nutrient Cycles II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2003
b13N Vulnerability of Permafrost Carbon to Climate Change II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
H13L Advances in Understanding Land-Atmosphere Interactions III 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3022
NH13D Landslide Triggering and Runout Mechanics: Physical, Hydro-logical, and Geotechnical Approaches I (Virtual Option) 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Room 104
PP13C Sensitivity of Peatland Carbon balance to Climate Change: Past and Future III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b14E Vulnerability of Permafrost Carbon to Climate Change III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
H14D Measurement and Modeling of Root-Zone Processes Influencing Water, Carbon and Nitrogen Cycles at Various Scales II 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3009
2013 AGU FALL MEETING24
SWIR
LSTuesday, 10 December
MORNING
b21D Vulnerability of Permafrost Carbon to Climate Change IV Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H21C Advances in Understanding Land- Atmosphere Interactions Posters IV 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
V21A Examining Soil Salts in Hyper- arid Environments on Earth and Mars Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
AFTERNOON
H23D Greenhouse Gas Dynamics in Freshwater Systems: From Soils to the Hydrosphere to the Atmosphere Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H23F Hydropedology: Synergistic Integration of Soil Science and Hydrology in the Critical Zone I Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
NH23A Landslide Triggering and Runout Mechanics: Physical, Hydrolog-ical, and Geotechnical Approaches II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
Wednesday, 11 December
MORNING b31G Data-Model Integration for Improving biogeochemistry-Climate Feedbacks in Earth System Models With Explicit Microbial Mechanisms I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
H31J Colloids, Engineered Nanopar-ticles, and Emerging Contaminants in the Environment I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
H31M Hydropedology: Synergistic Integration of Soil Science and Hydrology in the Critical Zone II 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3020
b32C Linking Geochemical and Micro-bial Effects on Organic Matter Dynamics in Cold Ecosystems I 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 2004
H32A Colloids, Engineered Nanopar-ticles, and Emerging Contaminants in the Environment II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3011
H32D Hydropedology: Synergistic Inte-gration of Soil Science and Hydrology in the Critical Zone III 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3020
AFTERNOON b33C Data-Model Integration for Improv-ing biogeochemistry-Climate Feedbacks in Earth System Models with Explicit Microbial Mechanisms II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b33G Linking Geochemical and Micro-bial Effects on Organic Matter Dynamics
in Cold Ecosystems II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H33C Colloids, Engineered Nanopar-ticles, and Emerging Contaminants in the Environment III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H33D Cracking the Conundrum of Soil Measurement: Strategies and Instru-ments Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
Thursday 12 December
MORNING
H41O Multi-scale Interactions and Structures in Soil-Vegetation-Atmo-sphere-Systems: Monitoring, Modeling and Data Assimilation I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3020
AFTERNOON
H43D Multi-scale Interactions and Structures in Soil-Vegetation-Atmo-sphere-Systems: Monitoring, Modeling and Data Assimilation II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
H43L Hydrogeophysical Characterization of the Critical Zone I 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3014
Friday, 13 December
MORNING H51F Hydrogeophysical Characterization of the Critical Zone II Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
252013 AGU FALL MEETING
SWIRLS
Urbanization creates areas of intense human modifications that affect global biogeochemical cycles, climatic and atmospheric chemical gradients, hydrologic transport vectors moving mate-rials through Earth systems, and the structure of these Earth systems. To mitigate these issues, multi-disciplinary approaches are needed to understand material and energy flows through com-plex urban systems. Further, examination of the urban systems must incorporate the fundamental response of human populations to ongoing geophysical change. Sessions focusing on urban systems have emerged across the sections to respond to cross-cutting challenges in character-izing these systems. This SWIRL will formally organize these section efforts into a greater whole, allowing examination of urban systems in their rich context. These sessions includes all aspects of ecological, hydrological, and atmospheric processes; impacts of land cover and green infrastruc-ture; and socio-economic and sustainability approaches to urban issues.
Urban Systems
H11O Water, Energy and Society in Urban Systems I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3018
H12F Water, Energy and Society in Urban Systems II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3018
Monday, 9 December
MORNING
AFTERNOON H13P Water, Energy and Society in Urban Systems III 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 3018
NG14A Natural Turbulence From Centimeters to Megameters I 4:00 P.M., Moscone South, Room 102
Tuesday, 10 December
MORNING
H21J Water, Energy and Society in Urban Systems III Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
AFTERNOON
NG23A Natural Turbulence From Centimeters to Megameters II Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
Wednesday, 11 December
MORNING
A31G Uncertainty Estimations of Highly Resolved Urban Emissions Posters (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
b31E Urban Areas and Global Change I Posters 8:00 A.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
AFTERNOON
b33N Urban Areas and Global Change II 1:40 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2002
b34C Urban Areas and Global Change III 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2002
Thursday 12 December
AFTERNOONA44F Measuring and Modeling the Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Cities and Localized Rural Sources I (Virtual Option) (cosponsored by AMS) 4:00 P.M., Moscone West, Room 2022
2013 AGU FALL MEETING26
SWIR
LSFriday, 13 December
A51J Measuring and Modeling the Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Cities and Localized Rural Sources II (cosponsored by AMS) 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3010
GC51E Environmental Impacts of Urbanization: Hazards, Risks, and Opportunities from Neighborhood to Globe I 8:00 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
GC52A Environmental Impacts of Urban-ization: Hazards, Risks, and Opportunities from Neighborhood to Globe II 10:20 A.M., Moscone West, Room 3003
MORNING
AFTERNOON
A53E Measuring and Modeling the Greenhouse Gas Emissions of Cities and Localized Rural Sources III Post-ers (cosponsored by AMS) 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
GC53A Environmental Impacts of Urbanization: Hazards, Risks, and Opportunities from Neighborhood to Globe III Posters 1:40 P.M., Moscone South, Hall A-C
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272013 AGU FALL MEETING
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2013 AGU FALL MEETING28
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