Atualizado: 21 de jul. de 2020
O programa de Professores Visitantes Honorários, do INCT AmbTropic, em conjunto com o IODP-CAPES (profa. Helenice Vital – UFRN), promoveu a vinda do Professor Andre W. Droxler (Rice University) para uma série de cursos na UFPE, UFBA e UFRN. Na UFBA, o curso “Mixed Carbonate Siliciclastic Margins: Reefs Establishment, Growth, and demise from Quaternary to Cambrian“ foi ministrado entre os dias 22 e 24 de janeiro. O curso supervisionado pelo prof. Ruy Kikuchi (UFBA), foi seguido de duas palestras que tiveram como tema a ciência que suporta os estudos das mudanças climáticas globais, e novas evidências da influência de mudanças climáticas no declínio da civilização Maia. Suas atividades foram complementadas por uma visita de campo a microbialitos da porção norte da Chapada Diamantina, em especial, ao Geossítio Fazenda Arrecife, no município de Várzea Nova, onde os alunos obtiveram o suporte suplementar no estudo de ocorrências de recifes microbianos do Precambriano.
Atualizado: 27 de ago. de 2020
O inctAmbtropic II co-patrocina juntamente com o programa CAPES-IODP (Projeto Geohazards) a vinda ao Brasil do prof. André Droxler, que durante o meses de Janeiro e Fevereiro de 2018 estará ministrado palestras e mini-cursos nas Universidades Federais do Rio Grande do Norte, Pernambuco e Bahia. A vinda do prof. Droxler foi uma iniciativa da profa. Helenice Vital (UFRN) membro do comitê gestor do inctAmbTropic II.
A programação resumida está apresentada abaixo juntamente com o resumé do prof. Droxler.
Professor André W. Droxler (Ph.D.)
Rice University – D of Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences – Houston, TX (USA)
"I am a professor in the Department of Earth Science and currently the Track Director of the Science Master’s Program – Subsurface Geoscience. My research has focused on studying the morphology of and the sediments accumulating on slopes and basin floors surrounding coral reefs and carbonate platforms. Over the past 30 years, I have conducted research programs mostly in the Bahamas, offshore Jamaica, along the Belize margin, in the western Gulf of Mexico, in the Maldives (Indian Ocean), along the Australian Great Barrier Reef and in the Gulf of Papua (Papua New Guinea). The main focuses of my research include the regional and global evolution of coral reefs through time, the paleo-oceanographic/climatic and sea level records archived in the sediments deposited around reefs and carbonate platforms. In contrast with my 30 years plus research a s a marine geologist, I am currently conducting research on Upper Cambrian Microbial Reefs in Mason County, Central Texas funded by an Industry Consortium in collaboration with my colleague Prof. Dan Lehrmann at Trinity University in San Antonio (Texas). My work has been funded by the National Science Foundation, the American Chemical Society, and grants from oil and gas companies. Before becoming an assistant professor at Rice in January 1987, I was a postdoctoral research scientist at the University of South Carolina from 1985 to 1986. I received my Master’s degree equivalent from the University of Neuchâtel (Switzerland) in 1978 and earned his Ph.D. from the Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Miami (Florida) in 1984."
Course UFPE – Recife
For aditional information please contact: antonio.vicente@ufpe.br and beatrice@ufpe.br
10-12 January 2018 – Short course “Mixed Carbonate Siliciclastic Margins: Reefs Establishment, Growth, and demise from Quaternary to Cambrian” – 6 hours per day (total 18 hours)
January 10: Modern Settings – Pleistocene Deglacial Establishment – Quaternary Interglacials
January 11: Neogene Evolution in the Gulf of Papua – Belize
January 12: Permian Reefs in West Texas and Cambrian Microbial Reefs in Central Texas
January 13-15: Fieldtrip
Course UFBA – Salvador
For aditional information please contact: ruykenji@gmail.com
22-24 January 2018 – Short course “Mixed Carbonate Siliciclastic Margins: Reefs Establishment, Growth, and demise from Quaternary to Cambrian” – 6 hours per day (total 18 hours)
January 22: Modern Settings – Pleistocene Deglacial Establishment – Quaternary Interglacials
January 23: Neogene Evolution in the Gulf of Papua – Belize
January 24: Permian Reefs in West Texas and Cambrian Microbial Reefs in Central Texas
January 25 Seminar: Science Behind Current Climate Change and Global Warming
January 26 Seminar: Climate and the Demise of the Mayan Civilization
Course UFRN – Natal
For aditional information please contact: geofis@ccet.ufrn.br
05-09 February 2018 – Short course “Transgressive Reefs: Modern to Cambrian” – 6 hours per day (total 18 hours)
February 05: Modern Settings – Pleistocene Deglacial Establishment – Quaternary Interglacials
February 06: Neogene Evolution in the Gulf of Papua – Belize
February 07: Permian Reefs in West Texas and Cambrian Microbial Reefs in Central Texas
February 08 – 09 : Fieldtrip
February 19: Seminar: Science Behind Current Climate Change and Global Warming
No periodo 8-18 de setembro de 2014 será realizada em Natal (RN) com o apoio do inctAmbTropic (GT2.1), a escola de verão sobre Mudanças Costeiras. A escola de verão é organizada pelo Consórcio de Excelência “The Future Ocean” da Universidade de Kiel – Alemanha. Para maiores informações acessar o portal do Future Ocean.
Escola de Verão em Mudanças Costeiras
Programa Científico da Escola de Verão