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280100 VO Geological applications of radiogenic, volatile and metal stable isotopes and trace elements (2024S)
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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
Examination dates
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
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: Tu 17.09.2024 09:46
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