



And now for a summary of where I've been and what I've done. Yesterday, I spent a good portion of the morning and afternoon in the SEG sessions on Magmas and Volatiles: Linking Granites, Volcanoes, Geothermal Systems, and Mineral Deposits I & II (158 and 204). These sessions covered a wide range of topics from porphyry copper deposits to Carlin-type gold deposits, from zircons to fluid inclusions, and from subduction to low-angle normal faulting.
In the afternoon, I also bounced around the convention center, going to talks by various individuals including one by my first employer and mentor, a talk by geoblogger Brian Romans (200-8), and a talk by geoblogger Kim Hannula (200-12).
For the evening, I was invited to the QG&G awards meeting by Bud Burke, an old friend of mine from ties that go back as far as early grad school. I saw several old friends there, reconnected with people I hadn't expected to see, and actually managed to conduct some business relating to a Pleistocene lake in central Nevada. A paper about the lake will finally be published; I'll be a co-author when it comes out, probably because I provided the initial information about the area and was there when the first work was done, and because I tried to get the ball rolling on the article way back in the early 1990's. I'll say more about that when the paper is published.
Today I plan to be in the SEG sessions most of the day: morning and afternoon.
Be the way, summary posts about the GSA meetings by various geobloggers can be found at this GSA page: From the Blogosphere. I don't think the list is complete.
2 comments:
That shot of the Portland skyline is great. Not surprised to hear about rain. The sessions sound interesting and it's always nice to reconnect with friends and acquaintences. Plus the networking.... Good job on getting a paper published.
I'm actually still hoping on the paper in some ways, simply because this has taken so long. The first field visit was in 1990 - if I remember right - then publication by the original field geologist became impossible. Hopefully I'm not being too vague!
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