IAVCEI 2025 Session: Volcanism Across the Solar System

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From: Sam Poppe <sam35poppe@xxxxxxxxx>


*IAVCEI Scientific Assembly 29 June-4 July 2025*

* Are you working on volcanism on planetary bodies other than Earth and
keen to discuss the latest exciting discoveries about magma (or ice) and
eruptions on Venus, Io, the Moon etc.? We invite submissions to our
session "Volcanism Across the Solar System" in Theme 1. Abstract
submission deadline is 20 December 2024.

* We especially encourage early-career researchers and students to apply
for travel grants before 15 November 2024 via
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://sa2025.iavceivolcano.org/travel-grants/__;!!IKRxdwAv5BmarQ!bWCetAxS5yMb_ZOjHeHtJWzkzLQGiuNaY3kjscoCIo3LiYzgdzjhlgqzQmbzqOeLN8QJWKFGdfXx9Bh0ktUHFl2FBQ$

* Volcanism is one of the most ubiquitous processes at work in the Solar
System, substantially shaping the diverse surfaces of terrestrial
planets, main-belt asteroids, and icy satellites. Other than on Earth,
planetary volcanology is much more limited in its means of observing
volcanic features and processes elsewhere. Recent high-resolution
orbital data, samples from the lunar surface, and seismic data from the
Moon and Mars, have provided critical sources of knowledge to understand
the volcanic and thermal evolution of planetary bodies, and its
implications for the enticing possibility of life beyond Earth. We
invite observational, analytical, theoretical, and analogue fieldwork
research into any aspect of planetary volcanic activity. We welcome
submissions that compare landforms and processes on multiple bodies,
geochemical and chronological data from planetary material, numerical
modeling results, as well as future planetary mission concepts that seek
to revolutionize our understanding of volcanism across the Solar System.

*Abstract submissions due 20 December 2024:
https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://on-line-form.eu/iavcei2025sa/abstracts/__;!!IKRxdwAv5BmarQ!bWCetAxS5yMb_ZOjHeHtJWzkzLQGiuNaY3kjscoCIo3LiYzgdzjhlgqzQmbzqOeLN8QJWKFGdfXx9Bh0ktWBEx2jrA$

See you next year in Geneva!

Sam Poppe (Space Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw,
Poland), Paul Byrne (Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis,
USA), Lauren Jozwiak (Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel,
Maryland, USA) and Chloé Michaut (ENS de Lyon, Lyon, France).


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