Program
VENUESOral SessionsNational Academy of Sciences2101 Constitution Ave NWWashington DC 20418
Poster Sessions & Carnegie Capital Science Evening Lecture Carnegie Institution for Science1530 P St NWWashington DC 20005
Reception Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History10th St & Constitution Ave NWWashington DC 20560
Story Collider Busboys and Poets2021 14th St NWWashington DC 20009
24–26 October 2019
SCIENCE PROGRAM COMMITTEE SYNTHESIS GROUP 2019
Isabelle Daniel, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 Marie Edmonds, University of Cambridge
James Badro, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris Susannah Dorfman, Michigan State Universitys
Peter Barry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Kerstin Lehnert, Columbia University
Mark Lever, ETH Zürich Karen Lloyd, University of Tennessee
Catherine McCammon, University of Bayreuth Craig Manning, University of California, Los Angeles
Brendan McCormick Kilbride, University of Manchester Craig Schiffries, Carnegie Institution for Science
Graham Pearson, University of Alberta Celina Suarez, University of Arkansas
Craig Schiffries. Carnegie Institution for Science Dimitri Sverjensky, Johns Hopkins University
Fengping Wang , Shanghai Jiao Tong University Darlene Trew Crist, Crist Communications
DCO SECRETARIAT DCO ENGAGEMENT TEAM
Robert Hazen, Carnegie Institution for Science Rob Pockalny, University of Rhode Island
Craig Schiffries. Carnegie Institution for Science Katie Pratt, University of Rhode Island
Andrea Mangum, Carnegie Institution for Science Darlene Trew Crist, Crist Communications
Jennifer Mays, Carnegie Institution for Science Josh Wood, University of Rhode Island
Michelle Hoon-Starr, Carnegie Institution for Science
WITH THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Carnegie Institution for Science
Shell International Exploration & Production, Inc.
Gemological Institute of America
Mineralogical Society of America
Thermo Fisher Scientific
Ivan Selin
Anonymous Donor
2
OVERVIEW SCHEDULE THURSDAY, 24 OCTOBER 2019
08:00– Check-in, Continental Breakfast 09:00 National Academy of Sciences
09:00 Opening Remarks
09:30 Lightning Talks I
10:00 Coffee Break
10:30 Session I: A Decade of Discovery
12:00 DCO Emerging Leader Awards Presentation
12:15 Group Photo
12:30 Lunch
14:00 Session II: New Programs Emerging from DCO
16:00 Travel to Poster Session (charter buses provided)
16:30– Poster Session I 19:00 Carnegie Institution for Science
20:00 Story Collider Busboys and Poets
FRIDAY, 25 OCTOBER 2019
08:00– Check-in, Continental Breakfast 09:00 National Academy of Sciences
09:00 Lightning Talks II
09:25 Session III: DCO Synthesis
10:30 Coffee Break
11:00 Session IV: DCO Field Studies
3
12:30 Lunch
14:00 Session V: Future of Deep Carbon Science
16:00 Travel to Poster Session (charter buses provided)
16:30– Poster Session II 19:00 Carnegie Institution for Science
19:00 Travel to Reception (charter buses provided)
19:30 Reception 21:30 Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History SATURDAY, 26 OCTOBER 2019
08:00– Check-in, Continental Breakfast 09:00 National Academy of Sciences
09:00 Session VI: Quantities and Movements of Deep Carbon
10:30 Coffee Break
11:00 Session VII: Forms of Deep Carbon
12:30 Lunch
13:30 Session VIII: Origins of Deep Carbon
15:00 Coffee Break
15:30 Future Opportunities and Closing Remarks
16:30 Adjourn
4
DETAILED SCHEDULE THURSDAY, 24 OCTOBER 2019
08:00– Check-in, Continental Breakfast 09:00 National Academy of Sciences
09:00 Opening Remarks Robert Hazen, Carnegie Institution for Science Eric Isaacs, Carnegie Institution for Science Adam Falk, Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
09:35 Lightning Talks I Chair: Graham Pearson, University of Alberta Hot springs reveal deep Earth processes Peter Barry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Abiotic organic compounds form in rocks below hydrothermal vents Muriel Andreani, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 Carbon’s transformative journey to the deep mantle Susannah Dorfman, Michigan State University Large gem-quality super-deep diamonds provide snapshots of deep Earth processes Evan Smith, Gemological Institute of America
10:00 Coffee Break
10:30 Session I: A Decade of Discovery Chair: Craig Schiffries, Carnegie Institution for Science Extreme Physics and Chemistry Craig Manning, University of California, Los Angeles Reservoirs and Fluxes Marie Edmonds, University of Cambridge Deep Energy Isabelle Daniel, Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1 Deep Life Mitchell Sogin, Marine Biological Laboratory
5
12:00 DCO Emerging Leader Awards Presentation Chair/Presenter: Craig Manning
12:15 Group Photo 12:30 Lunch
14:00 Session II: New Programs Emerging from DCO Chair: Catherine McCammon, University of Bayreuth Ocean Floor - Earth’s Uncharted Interface Kai-Uwe Hinrichs, University of Bremen
International Center for Deep Life Investigation: A global platform for the entire deep life community Fengping Wang, Shanghai Jiao Tong University Structures, properties and reactions of carbonates at high pressures and temperatures, CarboPaT Bjoern Winkler, Goethe University Frankfurt
SZ4D: Understanding the processes that underlie subduction zone hazards in 4D Terry Plank, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory Science 4 Clean Energy Alberto Striolo, University College London The 4D Initiative: Deep-time data driven discovery in the evolution of planetary systems Shaunna Morrison, Carnegie Institution for Science The Earth First Origins Project: A new paradigm for searching for life’s origins Karyn Rogers, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute CLEVER Planets Rajdeep Dasgupta, Rice University
16:00 Depart for Poster Session (charter bus transportation provided)
16:30– Poster Session I 19:00 Carnegie Institution for Science
20:00 The Story Collider, Special DCO Edition Busboys and Poets
6
FRIDAY, 25 OCTOBER 2019
08:00– Check-in, Continental breakfast 09:00 National Academy of Sciences
09:00 Lightning Talks II Chair: Maggie Lau, Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, Chinese Academy of Science What the frack? Creation of a 2500 meter deep ecosystem Kelly Wrighton, Colorado State University Using noble gases to investigate the carbon-rich, ancient fluids of the deep subsurface Oliver Warr, University of Toronto Inclusions in diamonds reveal differences in how continents are made Karen Smit, Gemological Institute of America Crossover to diamond-like carbonates in the lower mantle Sergey Lobanov, GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences
09:25 Session III: DCO Synthesis Chair: Tamsin Mather, University of Oxford Tectonic drivers of the planetary carbon cycle on geological timescales Sabin Zahirovic, University of Sydney Biology Meets Subduction: Plate tectonics drive deep biosphere microbial community compositions Donato Giovannelli, University of Naples Federico II The Carbon Mineral Challenge: A look back on a four-year experi ment in big data mineralogy Daniel Hummer, Southern Illinois University How carbon links fluids, melts, and rocks in the deep Earth Dimitri Sverjensky, Johns Hopkins University
10:30 Coffee Break
11:001 Session IV: DCO Field Studies Chair: Doug LaRowe, University of Southern California
7
Initial results of the Oman Drilling Project Peter Kelemen, Columbia University Missions to the upper mantle—toward the most challenging endeavor in geosciences Fumio Inagaki, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology Exploration into the Earth’s deep biosphere and hydrogeosphere Barbara Sherwood-Lollar, University of Toronto Potential of abiotic methane generation in hydrothermal settings Shuhei Ono, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Forecasting volcanic eruptions using gas emissions Maarten de Moor, National University of Costa Rica Serpentinization, carbon and life: Insights through drilling the Atlantis Massif (IODP Expedition 357) Gretchen Früh-Green, ETH Zürich
12:30 Lunch
14:001 Session V: Future of Deep Carbon Science Chair: Ivan Selin DCO’s Decadal Goals: Crafting a roadmap for the first 10 Years Robert Hazen, Carnegie Institution for Science Deep Carbon: Past to Present...and Future Beth Orcutt, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences 11 Data science perspectives for the next decade of deep carbon science: Origins, forms, quantities, and movements in biogeochemical contexts Peter Fox, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Future of Deep Carbon Science: Leveraging knowledge from the DCO on non-steady state C-cycle catastrophes and its role in future climate states Celina Suarez, University of Arkansas The most important research questions in deep carbon science for the coming decade Karen Lloyd, University of Tennessee
15:00 Discussion with Audience w
8
16:00 Depart for Poster Session (charter bus transportation provided)
16:30 Poster Session II 19:00 Carnegie Institution for Science
18:45 Toast and Remarks
19:00 Depart for Reception (charter bus transportation provided)
19:30 Reception 21:30 Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History
SATURDAY, 26 OCTOBER 2019
08:00– Check-in, Continental Breakfast 09:00 National Academy of Sciences
09:00 Session VI: Quantities and Movements of Deep Carbon Chair: Mark Lever, ETH Zürich Carbon in the Convecting Mantle Elizabeth Cottrell, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Insitution
Volatile cycling within the Aleutian Arc: Isotopic constraints| from subducted sediment inputs and volcanic gas outputs Taryn Lopez, University of Alaska Fairbanks
Metamorphic degassing of abiotic methane at convergent margins Alberto Vitale Brovarone, Università degli Studi di Torino; IMPMC-CNRS The biomass and biodiversity of the continental subsurface Cara Magnabosco, ETH Zürich
Keynote: Release the Juice Chris Ballentine, University of Oxford
10:30 Coffee Break
11:00 Session VII: Forms of Deep Carbon Chair: James Badro, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris Earth’s carbon paradox Jackie Li, University of Michigan
9
New perspectives on abiotic organic synthesis during hydrothermal alteration of the oceanic lithosphere Benedicte Ménéz, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris High pressure forms of aqueous carbon Ding Pan, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology C storage in reduced mantle Marc Hirschmann, University of Minnesota Keynote: Viewing carbon at extreme conditions Wendy Mao, Stanford University
12:30 Lunch
13:30 Session VIII: Origins of Deep Carbon Chair: Sami Mikhail, University of St Andrews Origins of Carbon in the Solar System and on Earth: An Update Bernard Marty, University de Lorraine, CRPG/CNRS CH4 isotopic bond ordering in two dimensions: summary and perspectives Edward Young, University of California, Los Angeles Carbon cycling and serpentinization: an update from Lost City and the Atlantis Massif Susan Lang, University of South Carolina Global patterns of subsurface microbial diversity and function Rick Colwell, Oregon State University Keynote: When and how does subsurface life make methane under extreme energy and carbon limitation Alexis Templeton, University of Colorado
15:00 Coffee Break
15:30 Future Opportunities and Closing Remarks Chair: Marie Edmonds, University of Cambridge Long term evolution of whole Earth carbon cycling Cin-Ty Lee, Rice University Alien oceans as an opportunity for the deep carbon community Chris Glein, Southwest Research Institute Closing Remarks Marie Edmonds, University of Cambridge 16:30 Adjourn
10
POSTER SESSION I THURSDAY, 24 OCTOBER 2019
T01 CO2 output and origin from the Earth’s most actively degassing volcanoes (2005–2015): lessons learnt from the DECADE DCO project Alessandro Aiuppa, Università di Palermo
T02 Hydrochemical facies in ophiolitic system Calin Baciu, Babeș-Bolyai University
T03 High-temperature generation of methane in terrestrial geothermal systems: evidence from clumped isotopologues Patrick Beaudry, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
T04 Predicting rates and distribution of carbonate melting in oceanic upper mantle: Implications for global carbon circulation Mark Behn, Boston College
T05 Stability to dissociation and melting of carbon dioxide phase V Roberto Bini, University of Florence - LENS
T06 Fate of carbon during the formation of Earth’s core Ingrid Blanchard, Bayerisches Geoinstitut
T07 Natural kind clustering of presolar silicon carbides and its astrophysical implications Asmaa Boujibar, Carnegie Institution for Science
T08 High-Pressure Transformations and Stability of Ferromagnesite in the Earth’s Mantle Eglantine Boulard, CNRS-IMPMC-Sorbonne Université
T09 Quantifying the power of life in the deep marine biosphere James Bradley, Queen Mary University of London
T10 Detection of primordial heavy noble gases in Yellowstone National Park Michael Broadley, Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et Géochimiques
T11 Using data science tools to unravel interactions between microbial communities and their geologic environment Joy Buongiorno, Carnegie Institution for Science
T12 Replicate mantle diamonds Hélène Bureau, IMPMC/CNRS
T13 Stability of iron-bearing carbonates in the deep Earth’s interior Elena Bykova, Carnegie Institution for Science
T14 Characterising diffuse CO2 degassing in tectonically active areas by using groundwater Carlo Cardellini, Università di Perugia
11
T15 Phase relations and elastic properties of Fe-C-H alloys at high pressures: Implica-tions to deep carbon and hydrogen cycles Bin Chen, University of Hawaii at Manoa
T16 Quantifying 4He Degassing from Crystalline Basement with 1D Vertical Transport Models Anran Cheng, University of Oxford
T17 Modeling the transport of melt and volatiles by integrating thermodynamic models in geodynamic simulations using the community code ASPECT Juliane Dannberg, University of Florida
T18 Decreasing temperature and increasing XCO2 boost silica dissolution in the system MgO-SiO2-H2O-CO2 Daniel Fineman, University of California, Los Angeles
T19 Crustal diamonds from organic carbon compounds Maria Luce Frezzotti, Università Milano Bicocca
T20 The DEW-MELTS connection: Integration of thermodynamic models for magmat-ic systems and aqueous fluids at elevated temperatures and pressures Mark Ghiorso, OFM Research
T21 The speciation of carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen, and oxygen in magma oceans and the resulting compositions of proto-atmospheres Damanveer Grewal, Rice University
T22 In vivo visualization of methyl coenzyme M reductase transcriptional activity in deep biosphere anaerobic methanotrophs (ANMEs) Rachel Harris, Princeton University
T23 Global diversity of subseafloor sedimentary microbiome Tatsuhiko Hoshino, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
T24 Injection of volatile-rich magma triggered intense paroxysmal eruption (23 Nov 2013) at Etna Ery Hughes, California Institute of Technology
T25 Exploring chemolithotrophic and chemoorganotrophic microorganisms from deep granitic Archaean basement underneath the Deccan Traps, India Sufia Kazy, National Institute of Technology Durgapur
T26 Origin and flux of methane within the Fennoscandian Shield, Finland Riikka Kietäväinen, Geological Survey of Finland
T27 Deep Hydrocarbon Cycle Vladimir Kutcherov, Gubkin University, KTH Royal Institute of Technology
T28 Magma degassing and CO2 emission at Merapi volcano, Indonesia, during a rare post-paroxysmal rest phase: continuous survey and implications Patrick Allard, IPGP, CNRS, Université de Paris
12
T29 Microbial processing of organic carbon on a global scale Douglas LaRowe, University of Southern California
T30 Multiple sulfur and oxygen isotopic constraints on the origin of dissolved sulfate powering the deep subsurface biosphere in the Witwatersrand Basin, South Africa Long Li, University of Alberta
T31 Preliminary results of CO2 degaassing in the tectonically active areas of Balkan Peninsula Artur Ionescu, University of Perugia
T32 Deep Time Knowledge Base: Facilitate Data Integration through Machine-Readable Geologic Time Concepts Marshall X Ma, University of Idaho
T33 Carbon recycling at subduction zones Alberto Malinverno, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
T34 Aerosol chemistry of the 2018 Kīlauea Lower East Rift Zone eruption – from source to exposed communities Emily Mason, University of Cambridge
T35 Challenges to quantifying and understanding magmatic carbon fluxes today and over geological history: examples from the East African Rift Tamsin Mather, University of Oxford
T36 Iron/carbon interplay in subsurface serpentinites of the Atlantis Massif (IODP Exp. 357) Lisa Mayhew, University of Colorado
T37 How Earth’s early magma ocean captured mantle carbon Catherine McCammon, University of Bayreuth
T38 The Evolving Picture of Abiotic Organic Synthesis in Serpentinite-hosted Deep-sea Hydrothermal Systems Tom McCollom, University of Colorado
T39 Linking Enzyme Evolution to the Rock Record with Stable Isotope Enabled Enzymology Shawn McGlynn, Earth-Life Science Institute
T40 Carbonate, serpentinite and water storage and supply in subducted upper oceanic lithosphere for the past 320 Ma Andrew Merdith, Université Lyon 1
T41 Structure and thermal equation of state of Ca3KNa(CO3)4 carbonate and their role in REE partitioning Marco Merlini, Università degli Studi di Milano
T42 The history of deep carbon science: the 400 years of discovery prior to DCO Simon Mitton, University of Cambridge
13
T43 Global evolution of CO2 in oceanic lithosphere over the last 230 million years Dietmar Muller, The University of Sydney
T44 The Atlantic Ring of Fire: When, How, Why on Earth? Matthieu Galvez, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
T45 Recently produced microbial methane mixes with abiotic methane released during low-temperature alteration in the Samail ophiolite, Oman Daniel Nothaft, University of Colorado
T46 The Potential Double-Edge Reactivity of Asbestos Fibers in Biological Systems Ileana Pérez-Rodríguez, University of Pennsylvania
T47 Data to Science. Science to Data. Data Science! EarthChem’s Collaboration with the DCO Lucia Profeta, Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory
T48 The Carbon Mineral Challenge: A Look Back on a Four-Year Experiment in Big Data Mineralogy Daniel Hummer, Southern Illinois University
T49 Crystallographic investigations of diamonds and their inclusions: a powerful tool to unravel geological processes Matteo Alvaro, University of Pavia
T50 Global Monitoring of Carbon and Sulfur Emissions from Volcanoes: Insights from Five Contributions to the DCO-DECADE initiative Santiago Arellano, Chalmers University of Technology
T51 Wehrlitisation as a proxy for passage and degassing of carbonated melts Sonja Aulbach, Goethe University
T52 How much methane is there in the oceans? Max Coleman, California Institute of Technology
T53 The carbon content of Earth’s core from metal-silicate partitioning experiments Rebecca Fischer, Harvard University
T54 Volcanic and Tectonic Degassing: Progress and Challenges Tobias Fischer, University of New Mexico
T55 Dihedral angle of CO2-rich melts in the deep mantle Sujoy Ghosh, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
T56 Aqueous Glycine Condensation Under Extreme Conditions Nir Goldman, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
T57 Cycling Phosphorus on the Early Earth Jihua Hao, Rutgers University & University of Lyon 1
T58 Coupled serpentinization and carbon trapping in the Oman Ophiolite Isabelle Martinez, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
14
T59 Materials of the Universe - from Cosmology to Mineralogy to Materials Science Sergey Ushakov, University of California, Davis
T60 Experimental Thermodynamics of Oxides above 2000 °C Sergey Ushakov, University of California, Davis
T61 The Census of Deep Life and its Metadata Journey Karyn Rogers , Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute POSTER SESSION II FRIDAY, 25 OCTOBER
F01 Oxidized carbon forms in the Earth mantle: A journey to the core mantle boundary Valerio Cerantola, European XFEL
F02 Experimental constraints on the fate of MgCO3 and CaCO3 subducted into Earth’s lower mantle Susannah Dorfman, Michigan State University
F03 Crystal scavenging from mush piles produces spurious melt inclusion CO2 systematic Marie Edmonds, University of Cambridge
F04 An evolutionary system of mineralogy: data-driven classification of carbon minerals Robert Hazen, Carnegie Institution for Science
F05 How the bacterial lipids became isotopically so “light”? Maggie Lau, Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, Chinese Academy of Sciences
F06 The view from ABOVE: Aerial-based Observations of Volcanic Emissions at Manam, Papua New Guinea Emma Liu, University College London
F07 Melt inclusion constraints on mantle carbon heterogeneity within an individual mantle plume Simon Matthews, Johns Hopkins University
F08 Volcanic gas chemistry and flux from Bagana, a major “known unknown”deep carbon source Brendan McCormick Kilbride, University of Manchester
F09 Diamonds illuminate the nature of Earth’s deep and dynamic carbon cycle Sami Mikhail, University of St Andrews
F10 Macroscopic fossils of microbial communities in Eoarchean jasper from the Nuvvuagittuq Supracrustal Belt Dominic Papineau, University College London
15
F11 Carbonic fluids trap gas in magmas and increase eruption magnitude Mattia Pistone, University of Georgia
F12 DCO Engagement: Seven years of sharing deep carbon science Robert Pockalny, University of Rhode Island
F13 Modelling the liquidus surface of carbonatitic magmas Stefano Poli, Università di Milano
F14 Genome replication and effective CRISPR defense indicate a highly active micro-biome in the continental subsurface Alexander Probst, University of Duisburg-Essen
F15 Geochemical and thermodynamic constraints on the origin, composition, and stability of organic carbon in deep crustal rocks Laurent Richard, Nazarbayev University
F16 Carbonate melt mobility in the upper mantle Xenia Ritter, University of Münster, Institute for Mineralogy
F17 Changing the paradigm in observational volcano science: The GloVO and AVERT initiatives Diana Roman, Carnegie Institution for Science
F18 Extreme Biophysics: The molecular limits of life Catherine Royer, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
F19 Global patterns of subsurface microbial diversity and function S. Emil Ruff, Marine Biological Laboratory
F20 Some unusual properties of carbonate melts in the upper and lower mantle Chrystele Sanloup, Sorbonne Université
F21 Diversity and distribution of deep life within the Archaean granitic crust at Koyna, India Pinaki Sar, Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur
F22 “No vestige of a beginning…”: True or False? John Saul
F23 The Deep Carbon Observatory: An Interdisciplinary Quest to Study Carbon in Earth Craig Schiffries, Carnegie Institution for Science
F24 Microbial Community Responses to Drilling Induced Perturbations in a Serpentinization-Influenced Aquifer Matt Schrenk, Michigan State University
F25 Insights to microbial carbon cycling in an Archean banded iron formation Cody Sheik, University of Minnesota Duluth
F26 Evaluating the roles of melt-rock interaction and partial degassing on the CO2/Ba ratios of MORB: Implications for the CO2 budget in the Earth’s depleted upper mantle Kei Shimizu, Carnegie Institution for Science
16
F27 Foundations for Geomimicry and Geobiochemistry Based on Earth as Organic Chemist Everett Shock, Arizona State University
F28 Carbon solubility in the subducting slab and mantle wedge Joyce Shi Sim, Carnegie Institution for Science
F29 New Observational Constraints on Decarbonation During Subduction Emily Stewart, Yale University
F30 Large presence of carbonic acid in CO2-rich aqueous fluids under Earth’s mantle conditions Nore Stolte, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
F31 C-cycle perturbation of the Late Triassic to Early Jurassic: the continental record of Western Pangea Celina Suarez, University of Arkansas
F32 Deep microbial proliferation in Fe, Mg smectite-filled basalt fissures in aged oce-anic crust: Implications for heterotrophic rock-hosted life Yohey Suzuki, The University of Tokyo
F33 Water content of silicate mineral inclusions in superdeep diamonds from Juina, Brazil Andrew Thomson, University College London
F34 Carbon Reservoirs and Fluxes in Earth from DECCIMOL: Deep Carbon Cycle Integration Model Jonathan Tucker, Carnegie Institution for Science
F35 Absence of Amorphous Forms When Ice is Compressed at Low Temperature Chris Tulk, Oak Ridge National Laboratory
F36 Patterns of high-P serpentinization at blueschist-to-eclogite-facies conditions and related genesis of H2 and abiotic hydrocarbons Alberto Vitale Brovarone, Torino University/IMPMC-CNRS
F37 Estimating CO2 emissions at São Miguel Island (Azores archipelago) – an ongoing task Fátima Viveiros, IVAR - University of the Azores
F38 Demonstration of a highly miniaturized 13CO2 / 12CO2 analyser for real-time, in situ, field analysis Damien Weidmann, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory
F39 Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Subaerial Volcanic Regions Cynthia Werner, Contractor (USGS, VIC)
F40 Earth’s Carbon Transportation System Josh Wood, University of Rhode Island
F41 A deconvolution-based sensor response correction for volcanic gas measurements Kieran Wood, University of Bristol
17
F42 Fluid driven carbonation of serpentinite in the forearc mantle wedge – a high pressure experimental investigation using serpentinite cores Greg Yaxley, Australian National University
F43 Understanding modes of pyrite formation using natural clustering Shuang Zhang, Carnegie Institution for Science
F44 The Earth First Origins Project: A New Paradigm for Searching for Life’s Origins Karyn Rogers, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
F45 Modelling oceanic sediment thickness and deep-sea carbonates through time Dietmar Müller, The University of Sydney
F46 Coevolution of Life and Planet: role of trace metal availability in the evolution of biogeochemically relevant redox metalloenzymes Donato Giovannelli, University of Naples Federico II
F47 Bridging the Gap - Implementing unusual sampling techniques at Ol Doinyo Lengai volcano, Tanzania. Kate Laxton, University College London
F48 Variable carbon sources potentially lead to ecological niche adaptation and microbial diversification in serpentinizing systems Aurélien Lecoeuvre, Université de Paris, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
F49 Microbially mediated basalt alteration and increased CO2 retention in inoculated basalts Aurélien Lecoeuvre, Université de Paris, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
F50 Catalytic role of serpentinite paragenesis for the in situ abiotic synthesis of amino acids: a way towards metalloenzymes? Celine Pisapia, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris
F51 Fennoscandian Shield deep biosphere studies in Finland Lotta Purkamo, Geological Survey of Finland
F52 Origin and rheology of CO2-rich magmas controlled by changes in the mantle oxidation state through time Vincenzo Stagno, Sapienza University of Rome
F53 Transformation of carbon during high-pressure serpentinization: implications for deep carbon flux and deep energy Renbiao Tao, Université Lyon 1, ENS de Lyon, CNRS
F54 Basalt-hosted crustal fluid microbial communities use diverse mechanisms to fix inorganic carbon Elizabeth Trembath-Reichert, Arizona State University
F55 First-principles calculation of the stability of iron bearing carbonates at high pressure conditions Jun Tsuchiya, Ehime University
18
F56 A seawater throttle on H2 production in Precambrian serpentinizing systems. Benjamin Tutolo, University of Calgary
F57 Microbial Diversity of Rock-Hosted Serpentinite Subsurface Environment Katrina Twing, Tennessee Tech University
F58 Diamonds and the Mantle Geodynamics of Carbon (DMGC): Deep Mantle Evolu-tion from the Diamond Record Steve Shirey, Carnegie Institution for Science
F59 The Deep-Sea Osmolyte TMAO and Macromolecular Crowding Facilitate Con-formational Stability of DNA Hairpins and G-Quadruplex Structures Against Extreme Environmental Stresses Roland Winter, TU Dortmund University
ePOSTERS On display both Thursday and Friday
Data Science
E1 Global Earth Mineral Inventory (GEMI): A DCO Data Legacy Global Earth Mineral Inventory (GEMI) Anirudh Prabhu, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
E1 Analysis Toolkit for Deep-time Atmospheric Carbon Flux due to Subduction Zone Interactions Global Map of Carbon Lithology Ahmed Eleish, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
E1 Deep Carbon Data Portal: Origins and Insights Kathy Fontaine, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
E1 Comprehensive dataset for Hydrocarbons and H2 Formation during Serpentinization Experiments Fang Huang, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Maps, Visualizations, and Portals
E2 Mapping the Deep Subsurface Biosphere on a Sphere Rob Pockalny, University of Rhode Island
E2 DCO Field Studies Map Brenda Thompson, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
E2 Eruptions, Earthquakes & Emissions Global Volcanism Program, Smithsonian Institution
E2 ENKI Portal Mark Ghiorso, OFM Research
E2 The DECADE Portal Global Volcanism Program, Smithsonian Institution, MaGa Database, EarthChem Geochemical Portal
19
20
CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS
Jay Ague , Yale UniversityAlessandro Aiuppa, University of PalermoConel Alexander , Carnegie Institution for ScienceJames Allan, National Science FoundationPatrick Allard, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris/CNRSMatteo Alvaro, University of PaviaJan Amend, University of Southern CaliforniaMuriel Andreani, University Claude Bernard Lyon1Santiago Arellano, Chalmers University of TechnologySonja Aulbach , Goethe-UniversitätJesse Ausubel, The Rockefeller UniversityCalin Baciu, Babeș-Bolyai UniversityJames Badro, Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisChristie Baldizar, ThermoFisher ScientificChris Ballentine, University of OxfordPeter Barry, Woods Hole Oceanographic InstitutionDouglas Bartlett , Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San DiegoPatrick Beaudry, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyMark Behn , Boston CollegeAnn Benbow, Mineralogical Society of AmericaMagali Billen, University of California, DavisRoberto Bini, Universita di FirenzeBen Black, City University of New YorkIngrid Blanchard, Bayerisches GeoinstitutJennifer Blank, NASA | Blue Marble SpaceAsmaa Boujibar, Carnegie Institution for ScienceEglantine Boulard, IMPMCAmaury Bouyon, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris / University of MarylandJames Bradley, University of Southern CaliforniaMichael Broadley, Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et GéochimiquesTaras Bryndzia, Shell International Exploration & Production, Inc.Joy Buongiorno , Carnegie Institution for ScienceHélène Bureau, IMPMC/CNRSElena Bykova , Carnegie Institution for ScienceJohn Byrd, Miller-Wenhold/JMPARazvan Caracas , CNRS, ENS de LyonCarlo Cardellini, University of PerugiaRichard Carlson , Carnegie Institution for ScienceSimon Carn , Michigan Tech UniversityValerio Cerantola , European XFELBin Chen, University of Hawaii at ManoaAnran Cheng , University of OxfordQuiming Cheng , China University of GeosciencesHenderson Cleaves, Tokyo Institute of TechnologyDavid Cole, The Ohio State UniversityMax Coleman, NASA JPL & CaltechTerry Collins, Terry Collins & Associates
21
Rick Colwell , Oregon State UniversityElizabeth Cottrell, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian InstitutionSteve D’Hondt, University of Rhode IslandIsabelle Daniel, Université Claude Bernard Lyon1Juliane Dannberg, University of Florida; University of California, DavisRaj Dasgupta, Rice UniversityBaptiste Debret, Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisMaarten de Moor, National University of Costa RicaRobert Detrick, Incorporated Research Institutions for SeismologyHailiang Dong, Miami UniversitySusannah Dorfman, Michigan State UniversityJames Dottin III, University of MarylandMarie Edmonds , University of CambridgeMarie Edmonds, University of CambridgeAhmed Eleish, Rensselear Polytechnic InstituteAdam Falk, Alfred P. Sloan FoundationJames Farquhar, University of MarylandDaniel Fineman, University of California, Los AngelesRebecca Fischer, Harvard UniversityTobias Fischer, University of New MexicoYael Fitzpatrick, Gazelle Design ConsultancyKathleen Fontaine, Rensselear Polytechnic InstitutePeter Fox, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteMaria-Luce Frezzotti, Università Milano BicoccaGretchen Früh-Green, ETH ZürichMatthieu Galvez, ETH ZürichZach Geballe, Carnegie Institution for ScienceMark Ghiorso, OFM ResearchSujoy Ghosh, Indian Institute of Technology KharagpurDonato Giovannelli, University of Naples Federico IIChris Glein, Southwest Research InstituteMarguerite Godard, Université de MontpellierNir Goldman, Lawrence Livermore National LaboratoryAlexander Goncharov, Carnegie Institution for ScienceDamanveer Grewal, Rice UniversityMojhgan Haghnegahdar, University of MarylandBrooks Hanson, American Geophysical UnionJihua Hao, Rutgers UniversityShaun Hardy, Carnegie Institution for ScienceRachel Harris, Princeton UniversityOmar Harvey, Texas Christian UniversityRobert Hazen, Carnegie Institution for ScienceSara Hickox, Hanover, New Hampshire Kai-Uwe Hinrichs, University of BremenMarc Hirschmann, University of MinnesotaAdrienne Hoarfrost, Rutgers UniversityRush Holt, Washington, DC Michelle Hoon-Starr, University of MarylandTatsuhiko Hoshino, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
22
Dan Howell, University of AlbertaFang Huang, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteJulie Huber, Woods Hole Oceanographic InstitutionCasey Hubert, University of CalgaryEry Hughes, University of BristolDaniel Hummer, Southern Illinois UniversityToshiko Ichiye , Georgetown UniversityEvgenia Ilyinskaya, University of LeedsFumio Inagaki, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and TechnologyArtur Ionescu, University of PerugiaEric Isaacs, Carnegie Institution for ScienceAdrian Jones, University College LondonAaron Jubb, United States Geological SurveyAmol Karandikar, Carnegie Institution for ScienceSufia Kazy, National Institute of Technology, DurgapurPeter Kelemen, Columbia UniversityTom Kieft, New Mexico Institute of Mining and TechnologyBrandi Kiel Reese, Texas A&M University Corpus ChristiRiikka Kietäväinen, Geological Survey of FinlandJoanna Klein, New York TimesKasia Kornecki , American Geophysical UnionSebastian Krause, University of California, Los AngelesOliver Kreylos, University of California, DavisAdriana Kuehnel, Carnegie Institution for ScienceNico Kueter, Carnegie Institution for ScienceUmit Kunakbayeva, Nazarbayev UniversityVladimir Kutcherov, KTH Royal Institute of TechnologyJoshua Ladau, Gladstone InstitutesSusan Lang, University of South CarolinaDouglas LaRowe, University of Southern CaliforniaMaggie Lau, Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, CASKate Laxton, University College LondonAurélien Lecoeuvre , Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisCin-Ty Lee, Rice UniversityMark Lever, ETH ZürichLong Li, University of AlbertaTianshu Li, George Washington UniversityJackie Li, University of MichiganJung-Fu Lin, University of Texas at AustinYanhao Lin, Carnegie Institution for ScienceEmma Liu, University College LondonJin Liu, Center for High Pressure Science &Technology Advanced ResearchKaren Lloyd, University of TennesseeSergey Lobanov, GFZ German Research Center for GeosciencesTaryn Lopez, University of Alaska FairbanksKai Luo, Carnegie Institution for ScienceMarshall Ma, University of IdahoCara Magnabosco, ETH ZürichAlberto Malinverno, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
23
Andrea Mangum, Carnegie Institution for ScienceCraig Manning, University of California, Los AngelesWendy Mao, Stanford UniversityStephen Marshak, University of IllinoisIsabelle Martinez, Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisBernard Marty, Centre de Recherches Pétrographiques et GéochimiquesEmily Mason, University of CambridgeTamsin Mather, University of OxfordSimon Matthews , Johns Hopkins UniversityEric Matzner , Project VestaLisa Mayhew, University of ColoradoJennifer Mays, Carnegie Institution for ScienceCatherine McCammon, University of BayreuthTom McCollom, University of Colorado BoulderVicki McConnell, Geological Society of AmericaBrendan McCormick Kilbride, University of ManchesterShawn McGlynn, Earth-Life Science InstituteBénédicte Ménez, Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisAndrew Merdith, University of LyonMarco Merlini, University of MilanSami Mikhail, University of St. AndrewsSimon Mitton, University of CambridgeMargaret Moerchen, American Geophysical UnionRachael Moore, Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisShaunna Morrison, Carnegie Institution for ScienceDietmar Müller, University of SydneySamer Naif, Lamont-Doherty Earth ObservatoryOlivia Nigro, Hawaii Pacific UniversityLarry Nittler, Carnegie Institution for ScienceDaniel Nothaft, University of ColoradoPhilippe Oger, INSA LyonJames Olds, George Mason UniversityPaula Olsiewski, Alfred P. Sloan FoundationShuhei Ono, Masachusetts Institute of TechnologyBeth Orcutt, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean SciencesWilliam Orem, United States Geological SurveyDing Pan, Hong Kong University of Science and TechnologyDominic Papineau, University College LondonLina Patino, U.S. National Science FoundationGraham Pearson, University of AlbertaIleana Pérez-Rodríguez, University of PennsylvaniaCéline Pisapia, Institut de Physique du Globe de ParisMattia Pistone, University of GeorgiaMelissa Plail, Nature CommunicationsTerry Plank, Lamont Doherty Earth ObservatoryRob Pockalny, University of Rhode IslandStefano Poli, University of MilanAnirudh Prabhu, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteKatie Pratt, University of Rhode Island
24
Alex Probst, University of Duisburg-EssenLucia Profeta, Lamont Doherty Earth ObservatoryMagali Pujol, TotalLotta Purkamo , Geological Survey of FinlandSimon Redfern , Nanyang Technological UniversityLaurent Richard, Nazarbayev UniversityXenia Ritter, University of Münster, Institute for MineralogyDouglas Rogers, Yale UniversityKaryn Rogers, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteDiana Roman, Carnegie Institution for ScienceCathy Royer, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteEmil Ruff, Marine Biological LaboratoryDouglas Rumble, Carnegie Institution for ScienceChrystele Sanloup, Sorbonne UniversitéPinaki Sar, Indian Institute of Technology KharagpurJohn Saul, Paris, France Morgan Schaller, Rensselaer Polytechnic InstituteCraig Schiffries, Carnegie Institution for ScienceMatt Schrenk, Michigan State UniversityIvan Selin, Washington, DCAnat Shahar, Carnegie Institution for ScienceCody Sheik, University of Minnesota DuluthBarbara Sherwood Lollar, University of TorontoKei Shimizu, Carnegie Institution for ScienceSteve Shirey, Carnegie Institution for ScienceEverett Shock, Arizona State UniversityJoyce Sim, Carnegie Institution for ScienceKaren Smit, Gemological Institute of AmericaEvan Smith, Gemological Institute of AmericaWillow Socia, Retroscope MediaMitchell Sogin, Marine Biological LaboratoryAlex Speer, Mineralogical Society of AmericaMarc Spiegelman, Columbia UniversityVincenzo Stagno, Sapienza University of RomeAndrew Steele, Carnegie Institution for ScienceEmily Stewart, Yale UniversityNore Stolte, Hong Kong University of Science and TechnologyAlberto Striolo, University College LondonCelina Suarez, University of ArkansasYohey Suzuki, University of TokyoDimitri Sverjensky, Johns Hopkins UniversityRenbiao Tao, Université Lyon 1Alexis Templeton, University of Colorado BoulderAndrew Thomson, University College LondonBrenda Thomson, Rensselear Polytechnic InstituteSally June Tracy, Carnegie Institution for ScienceElizabeth Trembath-Reichert, Arizona State UniversityDarlene Trew Crist, Crist CommunicationsJun Tsuchiya, Ehime University
25
Jonathan Tucker, Carnegie Institution for ScienceChris Tulk, Oak Ridge National LaboratoryBenjamin Tutolo, University of Calgary Katrina Twing , Tennessee Tech UniversitySergey Ushakov, University of California, DavisJohn VanDecar, NaturePhilip Vetter, Institute of Deep-Sea Science and Engineering, CASSuzy Vitale , Carnegie Institution for ScienceAlberto Vitale Brovarone, Università degli Studi di Torino; IMPMC-CNRSFátima Viveros, IVAR - University of the AzoresPaul Voosen, Science/AAASZach Voss, Retroscope MediaLara Wagner, Carnegie Institution for ScienceMike Walter, Carnegie Institution for ScienceDa Wang, Carnegie Institution for ScienceFengping Wang, Shanghai Jiao Tong UniversityJianhua Wang, Carnegie Institution for ScienceYinzhao Wang, Shanghai Jiao Tong UniversityOliver Warr, University of TorontoBrittany Webster, American Geophysical UnionDamien Weidmann, Rutherford Appleton LaboratoryCynthia Werner, Contractor (USGS, VIC)Jeremy Williams, Kent State UniversityCian Wilson, Carnegie Institution for ScienceBjoern Winkler, Goethe University FrankfurtRoland Winter, TU Dortmund UniversityJosh Wood, University of Rhode IslandKieran Wood, University of BristolMatthew Wordell, Visionkit StudioLars Wörmer, MARUM - University of BremenDavid Wrausmann, National Museum of Natural HistoryKelly Wrighton, Colorado State UniversityJing Yang, Carnegie Institution for ScienceGregory Yaxley, Australian National UniversityChoong-Shik Yoo, Washington State UniversityEdward Young, University of California, Los AngelesSabin Zahirovic, University of SydneyShuang Zhang, Carnegie Institution for Science
NOTES