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SUMMARY:IQUA (Irish Quaternary Association) Spring Meeting and AGM2013
DESCRIPTION:IQUA Spring Meeting 2013\nHosted by the Palaeoenvironmental Reseasrch Unit\, School of Geography and Archaeology\, the Irish Quaternary Association presents their Spring Meeting\, involving a series of short talks and posters on Quarternary-based research. \nTo be followed by the IQUA Annual General Meeting \nALL WELCOME \nENTRY FREE \nSunday 28th: Optional fieldtrip led by MIchael Gibbons to Ballycaughan Bay ara c. 10:30-3:00pm \nFor further details see : www.iqua.ie \nProgramme: IQUA Spring Meeting and AGM 2013 \nSaturday 27th \n9.30 Registration \n10.00 Welcome to the 2013 IQUA Spring Meeting and AGM \n10.05 Michael Gibbons (Walkwest) Bualadh isteach: the drowned archaeological landscapes of the Burren coast \n10.25 Maria Long (Newtownshandrum\, Cork) Poulnabrone portal tomb -terrestrial Mollusca \n10.45 Keynote talk: Michael O‰۪Connell (NUIG) Palaeoecology: distant places\,new perspectives \n11.15 ‰ÛÒ 11.35 Coffee/Tea & poster session \n11.35 Michael Dempster*\, Paul Dunlop\, Mark Cooper and Andreas Scheib (UU) Investigating the geochemical relationship between till and soil in Northern Ireland: fieldwork and results \n11.55 Benjamin Th̩baudeau and Robin Edwards (TCD) Any luck? Early results on recent vibrocores off the north coast of Ireland \n12.15 Michelle McKeown (NUIG) A palaeolimnological assessment of the influence of climate change and human impacts on lakes in Western Ireland \n12.35 Stephen Galvin (NUIG) Identifying volcanic signals in Irish temperature observations and tree-ring chronologies \n12.55 Thor McVeigh (NUIG) Negotiating the difficulties of synchronizing archaeological and climatic/environmental dating evidence \n1.15 ‰ÛÒ 2.15 Lunch \n2.15 Sebastian Von Engelbrechten\, Fraser Mitchell* and Pete Coxon (TCD) A new Irish interglacial site: Knocknacran\, Co Monaghan \n2.35 Pete Coxon*\, Gareth J. Tye\, Adrian P. Palmer\, Ian Candy and Mark Hardiman (TCD) Annually-resolved natural climate variability during MIS11. Where the wild-fires are… and Homo heidelbergensis \n2.55 Ro Charlton*\, Wim Hoek\, Mark Macklin\, Kim Cohen\, Paul Gibson and Dorothy George (NUIM) Lateglacial and Holocenepalaeoenvironmental change recorded in the peat floodplains and palaeochannels of the lower River Suck \n3.15 Anthony Beese (Carraigex Ltd.\, Cork) Investigations of Cork’s origins \n3.45 pm Annual General Meeting followed by a wine reception \nPostersCarlos Chique (NUIG) Reconstructing historic and prehistoric eutrophication trends in a polluted freshwater lake \nEugene Costello (NUIG) Transhumance in Irish settlement and society\, c.1500-1900 A.D. \nChristina Connolly Johnston and Kieran Hickey (NUIG) The impacts of hurricanes on Ireland and Western Europe \nSeamus McGinley (NUIG) On the trails of the ‰Û÷Invisible People‰۪: new approaches to understanding human settlement and climate change in the Irish Iron Age \nKaren Taylor (NUIG) Palaeolimnological impacts of early prehistoric farming at Lough Dargan\, County Sligo\, Ireland \nSunday 28th \nOptional fieldtrip to Ballyvaughan Bay Area led by Michael Gibbons. The fieldtrip will focus on a range of sites\, including a group of cairns on Ballyvaughan Bay\, a seaweed farm visible in the inter-tidal zone on Aughinish Island (the best preserved example in the country) and a complex of midden sites on Kinvara Bay. The middens stretch over hundreds of metres and are found on both sides of Kinvara Bay. Some contain bone. If the tides are right we will visit Mulrooney Island (a tidal inlet).Depart Galway 10.30 and finish c.15.00. \nFor more information please contact  aaron.potito@nuigalway.ie
URL:https://mooreinstitute.ie/event/iqua-irish-quaternary-association-spring-meeting-and-agm2013/
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