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International Symposium On Deep-Time Environmental & Climatic Extremes And Biotic Responses-Third circular
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发布日期:2018-05-15

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International Symposium on Deep-time Environmental & Climatic Extremes and Biotic Responses

22-24 May, 2018, Wuhan, China

Third circular

1.     Invitation

IGCP630 and China University of Geosciences (Wuhan) invite you to participate in the International Symposium on Deep-time Environmental & Climatic Extremes and Biotic Responses in Wuhan, China, a beautiful city in central China. The Symposium will consist of a three-day meeting and be complemented by two field excursions before and one after the symposium, respectively to examine excellent marine and non-marine Permian–Triassic boundary sections, marine Lower-Middle Triassic successions as well as other major well-recorded extreme climate, environmental & biotic events (i.e., Snowball Earth event, O/S mass extinction, G/L mass extinction as well as life evolution processes during the critical periods of Earth history) in China.

The symposium will consist of presentations and posters that summarize main results that IGCP630 members and other researchers have obtained and focus on the causes and consequences of Permian–Triassic events and ecosystem recovery, as well as extreme climatic, environmental & biotic events during other critical periods in the geological past. Field excursions include: a three-day field excursion before the symposium to the well-studied Chaohu section, Anhui Province, examining the PTB and Lower Triassic successions and events (including well-known marine reptile fossil lagerstätten), and a four-day excursion before the symposium to Xian City and adjacent areas to investigate a non-marine Triassic succession recording ecosystem collapse and rebuilding on land, and a five-day excursion after the symposium to the classic long section recording the Ediacaran-Jurassic period of earth history in the beautiful Three Georges area, western Hubei Province.

Venue

The Symposium venue: China University of Geosciences (Wuhan) campus, China.

The Great Wuhan City is one of the most popular tourist destinations in China. Geographically, Wuhan is the heart of China, famous for spectacular riversides of the Yangtze River and many beautiful lakes within the city. It is also one of the most important industry, education and culture capitals in China. The city accommodates the largest population of undergraduate and graduate students (up to one million) in China, generating the hope for the future of this country.

The State Key Laboratory of Biogeology & Environmental Geology, and State Key Laboratory of Geological Process & Resource Geology, China University of Geosciences, the major sponsors of this symposium, are two of 40 state-level geoscience research centres in China. In these two centres more than 30 staff are working actively on the P/Tr mass extinction & Triassic recovery, and relevant topics. They are also training about 80 postgraduate students working on deep-time extreme events and relevant topics every year. China also records the most complete marine late Neoproterozoic to Triassic successions and terrestrial Triassic to Cenozoic strata as well as many important sites for studies on the P-Tr and other mass extinctions and climatic/environmental extremes in the world. Thus, the Symposium offers you unique opportunity to develop your collaborations with Chinese partners and take advantage of excellent geological record to probe into the deep of the P-Tr crisis as well as extreme climate/environment events in other critical periods.

2.      Sponsors & Organizers

Sponsors

IGCP630: Permian-Triassic Climatic and Environmental Extremes

United Nations Educational, Scientific & Culture Organization

International Union of Geological Sciences

International Geoscience Program (IGCP) Headquarter Office

IGCP China Committee

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Palaeontological Society of China

Anhui Geological Museum, Hefei

China University of Geosciences (Wuhan)

Organizer

State Key Laboratory of Biogeology & Environmental Geology, State Key Laboratory of Geological Process and Resource Geology, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan)

3.      Local Organising Committee

Zhong-Qiang Chen, Jinnan Tong, Laishi Zhao, Xulong Lai, Huazhou Yao, Shucheng Xie, Changqun Cao, Jun Liu, Shixue Hu, Dayong Jiang, Jianxin Yao, Jianxin Yu, Genming Luo, Haishui Jiang, Haijun Song, Yadong Sun, Huasheng Shan, Hao Yang, Daoliang Chu, Lei Zhang, Jun Shen

Convenors:             Zhong-Qiang Chen (zhong.qiang.chen@cug.edu.cn), CUG

                              Jinnan Tong (jntong@cug.edu.cn), CUG

                              Laishi Zhao (lszhao@cug.edu.cn), CUG

General Secretary:  Hao Yang (2003yanghao@163.com), CUG

Registration Administrator:

                              Jun Hu (hujuncug@163.com), CUG

Scientific Programme Coordinators:

                             Thomas Algeo, University of Cincinnati, USA

                             Zhong-Qiang Chen, China University of Geosciences

                             Jinnan Tong, China University of Geosciences

Field Excursion Coordinators:

                                 Genming Luo (logming@163.com), CUG, Wuhan

                                Daoliang Chu (daoliang_chu@163.com), CUG, Wuhan

                                Lei Zhang (zhanglei_cug@sina.com), CUG, Wuhan

4.      International Advisory Committee

Mark Hounslow, University of Lancaster, UK

Shuzhong Shen, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, CAS, China

Hongfu Yin, China University of Geosciences (Wuhan), China

Chengshan Wang, China University of Geosciences (Beijing), China

Mike Benton, Bristol University, UK

David Bottjer, University of South California, USA

Zou Caineng, Research Institute of Petroleum Exploration and Development, PetroChina, China

Zengqian Hou, Natural Science Foundation of China, China

Yanan Shen, University of Science and Technology of China

Charles Henderson, University of Calgary, Canada

Aymon Baud, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland

Paul Wignall, Leeds University, UK

Isabel Montanez, University of California Davis, USA

Thomas Algeo, University of Cincinnati, USA

Guang Shi, Deakin University, Australia

James Ogg, Purdue University, USA

Wolfram Karschner, University of Oslo, Norway

Steve Grasby, Geological Survey of Canada, Canada

Sylvie Crasquin, Université Pierre et Marie Curie, France

Peter Roopnarine, California Academy of Sciences, USA

Gregory Retallack, University of Oregon, USA

Steven Kershaw, Brunel University, UK

Roger Summons, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA

Kunio Kaiho, Tohoku University, Japan

Margaret Fraiser, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA

Michael Joachimski, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany

Yupeng Yao, Natural Science Foundation of China, China

Yu Liu, Natural Science Foundation of China, China

Jianguo Ren, Natural Science Foundation of China, China

Yukio Isozaki, University of Tokyo,  Japan

Arne Winguth, University of Texas at Arlington, USA

Kliti Grice, Curtin University, Australia

Jonathan Payne, Stanford University, USA

George Stanley, University of Montana, USA

Jean Broute, University of Paris VI, Paris

5.      General Schedule and Scientific Program

May 21: Afternoon (2:30 pm to 6:30 pm): registration (at CUG International Conference Centre)

May 22-24: Opening session, plenary session and topic sessions

The 3-day symposium will be scheduled. More than 15 active, world-renown Keynote speakers will be invited to summarize the main results of the ongoing studies on the P-Tr mass extinction and recovery as well as major extreme events during other critical periods of Earth history, and to outline the perspectives of these topics as well. Oral and poster presentations on any topics concerning deep-time extreme climate, environment and bio-events are also welcome! The talks will be followed by open discussion shaping the future studies on deep-time mass extinction, recovery and extreme climatic changes. Major symposium programs include:

 Plenary session (major extinctions and life evolution),

 Permian and P-Tr crisis,

 Triassic recovery and other events,

 Biotic and environmental events during other critical periods,

 General Palaeontology and Stratigraphy

6.      Field Excursions

Two pre-Symposium field excursions and one Post-Symposium are scheduled (see Appendix for more details).

7.      Social Programme

An icebreaker party will take place in the evening of the 21st of May 2018 at CUG, Wuhan. A conference dinner will be offered. The city of Wuhan and the surrounding areas have numerous interesting places to visit, including hot springs, mountains, and riversides.

8.      Call for Abstracts

Authors are invited to submit abstracts of one printed page by e-mail attachment (preferred). The deadline for abstract submission is:

April 30, 2018

Summit proceedings may be published in one thematic issue in Global and Planetary Change or other important international journals.

The official language of the meeting is English. A detailed guide for submission of abstracts will be available on the website of the meeting.

9.      Registration

Registration: onsite registration only

Registration form is attached. Please fill in the registration form and send it back to us

Registration Fees

An approximate estimate of the registration fees for the Symposium is:

Full/Student participant: 300/350 USD before/after April 30, 2018.

Accompanying member: 150 USD

1.      Pre-Symposium field trip (3 days) to Chaohu: 200 USD before April 30, 2018.

2.      Pre-Symposium field trip (4 days) to Xi’an City and other areas: 500 USD before April 30, 2018.

3.      Post-Symposium field trip (5 days) to Three Gorge area: 500 USD before April 30, 2018.

Full payment can be done online at

http://event.31huiyi.com/1325746501

10.  Funding

IGCP 630 has travel funds available for all participants to apply for sponsorship attending this event.

11.  Accommodation

CUG Guest Hotel (near symposium venue) is a 3- or 4-star hotel and provides 50-60 rooms (room rate: about 50-60 USD per night). There are many hotels nearby the Optical Valley area, Wuhan City (about 2-3 km away from CUG campus) having room rates ranging from 60-200 USD per night. If you hope book CUG Guest hotel and others, we can help make reservations, please contact Hao Yang (2003yanghao@163.com) or Jun Hu (hujuncug@163.com).

12.  Contact us

Secretariat and correspondence:

State Key Laboratory of Biogeology and Environmental Geology, China University of Geosciences

Hao Yang: e-mail: 2003yanghao@163.com

Jun Hu: e-mail: hujuncug@163.com

or, Zhong-Qiang Chen (zhong.qiang.chen@cug.edu.cn)

Tel: +86 27 67881036

Fax: +86 27 67881052

13.  Key dates

Abstract submission: closed.

14.  Website:

igcp630meeting.cug.edu.cn

Appendix: Field Excursion schedules

1.      Pre-Symposium field excursion to Chaohu area, Anhui Province (3 days; May 1921, 2018): The Chaohu area records the complete Carboniferous to Middle Triassic succession and is also the ideal place to see the consolidation between the South China and North China Blocks during the Middle-Late Triassic. This 3-day field trip aims to examine (1) marine uppermost Permian to topmost Lower Triassic successions, (2) the P-Tr, I-O and S-S boundary successions, and (3) exceptionally preserved Chaohu (Spathian) marine vertebrate Fossil lagerstätten.

Leaders: Lei Zhang (zhanglei_cug@sina.com), CUG; Jiandong Huang: Anhui Geological Museum.

Field Excursion Schedule:

May 19:           morning, Wuhan via Hefei to Chaohu by coach bus; afternoon, visiting the West Pingdingshan section (Changhsingian to lower Spathian), stay overnight at Chaohu city;

May 20:           morning, visiting western Majiashan section (continuous P-Tr boundary), then, rest of day, moving to the classic Majiashan section, investigating the complete the Griesbachian to Anisian successions with emphasis on marine vertebrate fossil horizons; optionally, seeing some frontier deposits of the North China block; stay overnight at Chaohu District;

May 21:           morning, visiting the Anhui Geological Museum in Hefei City; afternoon, going back to Wuhan by coach.

Note: Participants need to arrive in Wuhan on May 18, 2018. The registration fee (200 USD) for this excursion covers transportation between Wuhan and Chaohu and meals and accommodations for May 19-21 (excluding accommodation for 21st of May). This excursion does not provide accommodations for 18th and 21st of May in Wuhan. This excursion provides shared rooms for participants. If you hope have single room, please contact field excursion leader and pay the extra fee (60 USD, per night).

2.      Pre-Symposium field excursion to Xi’an City and adjacent Tongchuan areas in Shaanxi Province (4 days; May 1821, 2018): Sightseeing in Xi’an City, one of the most well-known Chinese ancient capitals, and moving to Tongchuan area, investigating (1) terrestrial uppermost Permian to Upper Triassic successions, (2) collapse and re-building of terrestrial ecosystems over the P-Tr transition, and (3) extreme climate changes (indicated by well-preserved paleosols).

Leader: Daoliang Chu (CUG) (daoliang_chu@163.com)

Field Excursion Schedule:

May 18:           morning, assembling in Xi’an city, then moving to Tongchuan area by coach; afternoon, visiting the Qishuihe section to examine the P-Tr boundary succession, stay overnight at Tongchuan city;

May 19:           whole day, visiting the Triassic succession in the Qishuihe section; stay overnight at Tongchuan city;

May 20:           morning, moving to Xi’an City, visiting some famous sightseeing spots within the city; participants may travel around the city by themselves, but need to stay overnight at the same hotel; stay overnight at Xi’an City;

May 21:           morning, visiting the Northwest University Museum to inspect exceptionally preserved collections of the Chengjiang Fauna (early Cambrian); afternoon: going back to Wuhan by high-speed train (about 4-5 hours), stay overnight in Wuhan.

Note: Participants need to arrive in Xian City on May 17, 2018. Please make your own travel plan. The registration fee (500 USD) for this excursion includes all meals and accommodations from 18th of May to 20th of May, and meals and ticket for high-speed train from Xi’an to Wuhan on 21st of May; This excursion does not provide accommodations for 17th and 21st of May in Xi’an City and Wuhan City, respectively. This excursion offers the shared rooms for participants during the trip. If you hope have single room, please contact field excursion leader and pay the extra fee (60 USD, per night) for single room.

 




图形5


 

           The city of Xi'an (Capital of Shaanxi province) was the first Chinese city to open up its doors to the Ancient world during the Tang dynasty. As one of the most important cities in Chinese history, Xi'an was the capital for eleven dynasties. This city was a world leader in culture and trade and played a vital role in bridging the gap between east and west during the Tang Dynasty. Xi'an is also renowned for being the eastern terminus of the Silk Road and for the location of the Terracotta Army of Qin Dynasty. The city has more than 3,000 years of history. It was called Chang'an in ancient times. Aside from being a major tourist destination and historical city, today Xi'an has become an important cultural, industrial and educational center of the central-northwest region, with facilities for research and development and China's space exploration program. Xi'an is situated in the center of the Guanzhong Plains, surrounded by Mountains in the south and the Wei River in the north. More information is available in the following link:

 





 

The Qishuihe section is situated near the Tongchuan City, 100 km from Xi’an City (35.209°N, 109.056°E). An almost continuous outcrop records the Late Permian to Middle Triassic strata in the Qishuihe section. The P-Tr redbed succession is composed of the Sunjiagou, Liujiagou and Heshanggou formations. The Sunjiagou Formation consists of fine-grained sandstones, reddish siltstones and mudstones, containing Paleozoic-type plants and pareiasaurs. In addition, the Sunjiagou Formation contains marine bivalves and brachiopods in the Baoji and Tongchuan areas, which might indicate the occurrence of a transgression. Current researches suggest that the upper part of Sunjiagou Formation corresponds to the P-Tr transitional interval. The overlying Liujiagou Formation comprises reddish and brown-reddish fine-grained sandstones interbeded with siltstones and conglomerates. The Heshanggou Formation is composed mainly of purple siltstones and mudstones with diverse trace fossils.  

3        Post-Symposium field excursion to Three Gorge area (5 days; May 2529, 2018): Sedimentary succession from Ediacaran to Triassic with emphasis on the Permian/Triassic boundary up to Spathian successions in Three Gorge area, western Hubei, aiming to examine the Ediacaran Snowball Earth event, Precambrian-Cambrian event, O/S mass extinction, G/L mass extinction, P/Tr mass extinction, and Triassic recovery.

Leader: Genming Luo: logming@163.com, (CUG):

Field Excursion Schedule:

May 25:          early morning, departing Wuhan to Yichang city by bullet train, then moving to Zigui county by coach bus; afternoon, visiting the Neoproterozoic succession there, stay overnight at CUG field geologic camp at Zigui County town.

May 26:          whole day, examining Lower Palaeozoic successions from Cambrian to Silurian, including the GSSP sections for the base of the Hirnantian in Wangjiawan and the base of the Dapingian in Huanghuaxiang; stay overnight at Zigui county town.

May 27:         morning, investigating the Upper Paleozoic successions: Carboniferous, Permian succession; afternoon: touring in the Three-Gorge area (sightseeing at the Great Yangtze River Dam, optional); stay overnight at Zigui county town;

May 28:          whole day, investigating the Upper Permian-Middle Triassic successions including the G/L boundary section and Daxiakou deep-sea facies PTB section, stay overnight at Zigui county town;

May 29: morning, moving to Yichang City High-speed Train Station by coach, then, moving back to Wuhan by bullet train.

     

Fig. 1 Traffic map showing locations of the Yichang area and visiting sections. 1: Precambrian to Lower Cambrian sequence in the Zigui area; 2. Lower Palaeozoic sequence, from Cambrian to Silurian, in Huanghuaxiang area; 3. Upper Permian to Middle Triassic sequence in Xiakou Town.

     

Figure 2. Selected field photos showing the late Neoproterozoic successions in the Three Gorge area. A, Drop stone in the Nantuo tillite at the Huajipo section. B, The Nantuo tillite and Doushantuo Cap Carbonate at the Huajipo section. C, The Dengying and Yanjiahe Formations at the Yanjiahe section. D, GSSP section for the base of the Dapingian. E, GSSP section for the base of the Hirnantian. F, Deep-sea P-Tr boundary beds at the Daxiakou section. The red line represents the P-Tr boundary.

Note: The registration fee (500 USD) for this excursion includes all meals and accommodations from 25th of May to 29th of May (excluding accommodation for 29th of May) as well as transportations between Wuhan and Yichang/Zigui. This excursion does not provide accommodation for 29th of May in Wuhan City. This excursion provides gate ticket for sightseeing at Great Dam of Three Gorge area, and also offers the shared rooms for participants during the trip. If you hope have single room, please contact field excursion leader and pay the extra fee (60 USD, per night). Please make your own travel plan after arriving in Wuhan on 29th of May (estimating to arrive in Wuhan before 13:00 pm on 29th of May).

SCHEDULES AND VENUES

The registration desk will be in the lobby of Yingbinlou Hotel (CUG hotel) at the East campus and will be open at 7:00-12:00am, and 14:00-20:00 pm on June 3rd. At other times, registration will be accessible in the room 8105 of the hotel.  

http://www.geobiology.cn/images/image007.jpg

The west and east campus of CUG, 1-3 for conference halls and 4 for the restaurant

Location of the conference halls

IGCP Meeting Programme (22-24/05/2018)

22nd, Morning

Plenary Session; Octagon Conference Hall

 

ChairoersonsHongfu Yin,   Mike Orchard

08:10-08:30

Opening Ceremony

08:30-09:00

Dominic Papineau,   Chemically-oscillating reactions and the preservation of microscopic   medusoids during the Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event.

09:00-09:30

David A.T. Harper,  Early Palaeozoic brachiopod   diversifications and extinctions.

09:30-10:00

Haijun Song,  Marine red beds in the Early Triassic and deep times.

10:00-10:30

Group Photos, Coffee   & Tea Break

10:30-11:00

Peter D. Roopnarine,  Stability, incumbency and ecological reorganization   after the Permian-Triassic mass extinction.

11:00-11:30

Wan Yang, A Progress Report on Late Permian to Early Triassic   Sedimentary, Climatic, and Ecological Systems and Terrestrial Mass Extinction   in Bogda Mountains, NW China – Insights from Sedimentary, Geochemical, and   Paleobotanical Data.

11:30-12:00

Thomas J. Algeo,  The Permian-Triassic boundary crisis: Current state of   knowledge and future research directions.

 

22nd Afternoon

Triassic Session (1); Octagon Conference Hall

 

ChairpersonsTea   Kolar-Jurkovšek, Yuri D. Zakharov

14:00-14:20

Jinnan Tong,  [Invited] Lower Triassic Integrated Stratigraphy of   Chaohu, Anhui Province, China

14:20-14:40

James Ogg,  [Invited] Induan-Olenekian boundary interval:   Implications of global correlation with magnetostratigraphy.

14:40-15:00

Dayong Jiang, [Invited] Emergence and fast radiation of Mesozoic marine   reptiles after the end-Permian Mass Extinction

15:00-15:20

Marie-Béatrice Forel,  [Invited] A contrasting record:   between long-term survival and emergence of Triassic marine ostracods.

15:20-15:40

Coffee & Tea Break

15:40-16:00

Zhengyi Lyu,  A proposed ontogenesis and evolution lineage of conodont   Eurygnathodus costatus and its role in defining the base of the   Olenekian: a study in Jianshi, Westen Hubei, South China.

16:00-16:20

Michael J. Orchard,  [Invited] Late Triassic conodont   bioevents in the Western Canada Basin.

16:20-16:40

Liana G. Bondarenko,  Conodont assemblage from the   upper part of the lower Olenekian, South Primorye (Abrek bay).

16:40-17:00

Lei Zhang,  [Invited] The Smithian/Spathian boundary (late Early   Triassic): a review of ammonoid, conodont, and carbon-siotopic criteria.

 

 

23rd, Morning

Permian Session; Octagon Conference Hall

 

ChairpersonsYanan Shen,   James Ogg, Jun Liu

08:30-08:50

Jun Liu,  [Invited] Permian tetrapod-bearing strata in North China   and their implication

08:50-09:10

Xiao Shi, [Invited] Possible gallery forest in Lopingian North China

09:10-09:30

Yifan Xiao, [Invited] Low-latitudinal standard Permian radiolarian   biostratigraphy for multiple purposes with Unitary Association, Graphic   Correlation, and Bayesian inference methods.

09:30-09:50

Alexander S. Biakov, [Invited] Discovery of a new late Changhsingian bivalve   complex in northestern Asia and a diachronous end-Permian mass extinction.

09:50-10:10

Yuangeng Huang, [Invited] Reef ecosystem collapse coincides with    volatile volcanisms over Guadalupian-Lopingian (Permian) transition

10:10-10:20

Coffee & Tea Break

10:20-10:40

Huiting Wu, Prelude of benthic community collapse during the end-Permian   mass extinction in siliciclastic offshore sub-basin: brachiopod evidence from   South China

10:40-11:00

Zhang Lei, Instantaneous and long-term scale responses to environmental   stresses: discovery of radiolarians from volcanic ashes and their retrograde   evolution during the Lopingian (Permian).

11:00-11:20

Chao Liu, A major anomaly in the carbon cycle during the late Cisuralian   (Permian): Timing, underlying triggers and implications.

11:20-11:40

Fayao Chen,  Alatoconchids: Giant Permian bivalves from South China

11:40-12:00

Wenchao Yu, [Invited] Climatic and hydrologic controls on Upper Paleozoic   bauxite deposits in South China.

 

23rd, Afternoon

Permian-Triassic Session; Octagon Conference Hall

 

ChairpersonsMarie-Béatrice   Forel, Genmin Luo

14:30-14:50

Yuyang Wu, Organic carbon isotopes in the terrestrial P-Tr sections of   North China: implications for carbon cycle perturbation

14:50-15:10

Guozhen Xu, Major geochemical and clay mineral characterizations at two   terrestrial Permian-Triassic boundary sections in northern China and their   paleoclimatic significance.

15:10-15:30

Ting Song, Taxonomic and ecological variations of Permian-Triassic   transitional bivalve communities from the littoral clastic facies in   southwestern China.

15:30-15:50

Xueqian Feng, Unusual shallow marine matground-adapted benthic biofacies   from the Lower Triassic of the northern Paleotethys: implications for biotic   recovery following the end-Permian mass extinction.

15:50-16:00

Coffee & Tea Break

16:00-16:20

Wenwei Guo, Secular variations of ichnofossils from the terrestrial P3-T2   succession at the Shichuanhe section in Shaanxi, North China

16:20-16:40

Hongfei Chen, Evolution patterns of Echinodermata over the Permian-Triassic   transition.

16:40-17:00

Zhipu Qiu, Carbonate natural thermoluminescence and its implication for   dissolved Mn concentration in shallow water during the P–Tr transition.

 

 

 

23rd, Morning

Triassic Session (2); 3rd Meeting Room

 

ChairpersonsLaishi Zhao,   Dayong Jiang, Mingsong Li

08:30-08:50

Xingyu Ma, Mg isotope evidence for intensified continental chemical   weathering in the earliest Spathian.

08:50-09:10

Xueqian Feng, A diverse trackway-dominated marine ichnoassemblage from the   Lower Triassic in the northern Paleotethys: Ichnology and implications for   biotic recovery

09:10-09:30

Alexander M. Popov,  New data on the Lower Triassic brachiopod recovery:   evidences from South Primorye.

09:30-09:50

Minglong Li, Calcimicrobes of Permian-Triassic boundary microbialites and   their role in the framework construction: new evidence from the Pingguo   Platform, Guangxi Province, South China.

09:50-10:00

Olga P. Smyshliaeva*, First findings of the Euflemingites prynadai and Shimanskyites   shimaskyi (Ammonoidea) in the SMID section, South Primorye.

10:00-10:20

Coffee & Tea Break

10:20-10:40

Mingtao Li, Origin and significance of the Lower Triassic deep sea   carbonate precipitates in southern Tibet, China.

10:40-11:00

Yuheng Fang, Dwarf stromatolite-like structuresSLSsfrom Early   Triassic Daye Formation, Hubei Province, South China.

11:00-11:20

Kaixuan Ji, Terrestrial sedimentary evidence from North China Block for   intensified storms in the aftermath of P-Tr mass extinction.

11:20-11:40

Xue Wang, Permian-Triassic boundary microbialite successions of   Xiejiachao section, South China: biostratigraphy, geobiology and   carbon-sulfur isotopes

11:40-12:00

Yaling Xu, The Early Triassic Jurong fish fauna: age, faunal composition, redox condition and taphonomy

 

23rd, Afternoon

Precambrian-Early Paleozoic Session; 3rd Meeting Room

 

ChairpersonsWeihong He,   Zhenbing She

14:30-14:50

Xinchun Liu, Comparable study of the late Ordovician oceanic red beds.

14:50-15:10

Zhou Wang,  Glendonite occurrence with highly 13C-depleted isotopic   signature in the Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation, South China.

15:10-15:30

Yuefeng Shen, [Invited] Response of climate perturbations to the shift of   mid-late Ordovician carbonate biosedimentary systems, Tarim basin, China

15:30-15:50

Min Shi,   Eukaryote-bearing microbiota from the Mesoproterozoic Gaoyuzhuang Formation,   Tianjin, China and its significance.

15:50-16:00

Coffee & Tea Break

16:00-16:20

Ruo-ying Fan, Macroevolution of trace fossils of the Zoophycos group   and graphoglyptids  

 

 

24th, Morning

The 110th Anniverary of Prof. Zunyi Yang Session; Octagon   Conference Hall

 

ChairpersonsZhong-Qiang   Chen, Thomas J. Algeo, Jianxin Yu

08:30-08:40

Hongfu Yin,   Prof. Zunyi Yang’s contribution to the P-Tr studies   and Chinese Geology and Paleontology

08:40-09:00

Aymon Baud, [Invited] End result and viewpoint of the last 10 years   IGCP 630 and preceding 572 field meetings in South Turkey, Oman and India   (Kashmir).

09:00-09:20

Ying Cui, [Invited] Investigating the end-Permian hyperthermal using an   Earth system model of intermediate complexity.

09:20-09:40

Lilit Sahakyan, IGCP 630 conferences and field excursion on the   Permian-Triassic extinction event in Armenia.

09:40-10:00

Mingsong Li, [Invited] Sedimentary noise and Early Triassic sea levels   linked to land–ocean water exchange and obliquity forcing

10:00-10:20

Coffee & Tea Break

10:20-10:40

Xueqian Feng, Additional records of ichnogenus Rhizocorallium from   the Lower and Middle Triassic, South China: implications for biotic recovery   after the end-Permian mass extinction.

10:40-11:00

Yuri D. Zakharov, [Invited] Stable N-isotope analyses of upper   Wuchiapingian–lower Anisian mudstone from the middle and higher   palaeolatitudes of Russia and their palaeoclimatic interpretation.

11:00-11:20

Huyue Song, [Invited] The large perturbed sulfur isotopes in Lower Yangtze   Platform during the Early Triassic.

11:20-11:40

Siqi Wu,  Primary producer-dominated ecosystems recorded in the   Permian-Triassic boundary microbialites, South China.

11:40-12:00

Daoliang Chu, [Invited] Increased wildfire activity in tropical peatlands   during the onset of the Permian-Triassic crisis.

 

24th, Afternoon

Plenary Session; Octagon Conference Hall

 

ChairpersonsDavid A.T.   Harper, Jinnan Tong

14:30-15:00

Yanan Shen,  Sulfur cycling in late Permian - early Triassic oceans

15:00-15:30

Sohsuke Ohno,    Mechanisms of the K–Pg mass extinction and impact-driven ocean acidification

15:30-16:00

Ying Cui,  Atmospheric pCO2 Reconstructed across the   Early Eocene Hyperthermals.

16:00-16:10

Coffee & Tea Break

16:10-16:25

Zhong-Qiang Chen, IGCP 630 (2014-2018): Achievements and Challenges

16:25-16:35

Xiao Shi, An Introduction on Post-Symposium Field Excursion: Snowball   Earth to the Greatest Mass Extinction in Three Gorger Areas

16:35-17:15

Closing Ceremony

 

 

 

 

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