Universität Wien

280100 VO Geological applications of radiogenic, volatile and metal stable isotopes and trace elements (2024S)

Registration/Deregistration

Note: The time of your registration within the registration period has no effect on the allocation of places (no first come, first served).

Details

Language: English

Lecturers

Classes (iCal) - next class is marked with N

Monday 08.04.2024 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II 2B284 will be the first unit with the possibility to partially re-arrange the course schedule, if needed.

Monday 08.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Tuesday 09.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Friday 12.04. 13:00 - 14:30 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Tuesday 16.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Friday 19.04. 13:00 - 16:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Monday 22.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Tuesday 23.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Friday 26.04. 13:00 - 16:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Monday 29.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II
Tuesday 30.04. 16:00 - 19:00 Felix-Machatschki-Seminarraum Mineralogie 2B284 2.OG UZA II

Information

Aims, contents and method of the course

The isotopic and geochemical characterisation of geological materials is a fundamental tool in Earth and Planetary Science, and a fast-moving field. Continued rapid advances in laboratory and analytical techniques have allowed to obtain elemental and isotopic information across the periodic table with ever-increasing precision and accuracy, enabling the analysis of ever-smaller sample volumes at high spatial resolution. This lecture series will recapitulate the basics of the discipline, review sample preparation and instrumentation and their limitations, and highlight the varied uses of radiogenic, volatile and metal stable isotope ratios in combination with trace elements to address specific problems in planetary evolution, geochronology, and Earth systems science with illustrations from recent case studies.
The aims of this course are to (1) familiarise students with some of the major outstanding questions regarding solid Earth and its interaction with the ocean-atmosphere system through time, and (2) raise their awareness as to the challenges, opportunities and future directions of applying high- and low-temperature element and isotope geochemistry to address these questions.

Preliminary structure:

1. Principles of trace-element geochemistry (including sample preparation and analytical techniques)
2. Basics of isotope geochemistry: Radiogenic and stable isotopes and the origin of their variations
3. Accurate and precise measurement of isotope ratios and recent instrumental developments
4. The stuff Earth is made of: Insights from multiple stable isotopes
5. Core formation and core-mantle interaction: Why it matters, what W-He isotopes tell us and what it means
6. Unravelling Earth evolution from the surface to the mantle with the Sr isotope system: Onset of continental weathering and establishment of the depleted mantle reservoir
7. Re-Os: Ultra-trace elements in trace phases and their application in high- and low-temperature geochemistry and geochronology
8. Challenges and opportunities in obtaining and interpreting lithospheric mantle ages
9. Mass-dependent and -independent S isotope fractionation in surficial environments: What they tell us about atmospheric O2 evolution and the deep crustal subduction
10. The multiple isotopes and valence states of Fe as tracers of redox processes in high-and low-temperature environments
11. Mg and Zn isotopes as distinct tracers of carbonate recycling in subduction zones and into the convecting mantle
12. Principles of chemostratigraphy
13. Palaeo-environment reconstructions: Insights from the biomineral archive
14. Isotopes and mineral resources (I): Radiogenic and light stable isotopes
15. Isotopes and mineral resources (II): Metal stable isotopes

Assessment and permitted materials

Regular attendance (>75%) and presentation of a paper (including 2 pages written report) to be picked from a selection of publications defined by the course leader.

Minimum requirements and assessment criteria

>75% attendance, oral presentation + 2 pages written summary on paper from paper seletion

Examination topics

course contents

Reading list

will be made available

Association in the course directory

MA-ERD-W-1.1

Last modified: Mo 11.03.2024 11:08