EGU General Assembly 2025

Austria Center Vienna Vienna, Austria

The EGU General Assembly 2025 brings together geoscientists from all over the world to one meeting covering all disciplines of the Earth, planetary, and space sciences. The EGU aims to provide a forum where scientists, especially early career researchers, can present their work and discuss their ideas with experts in all fields of geoscience.

PAGES 5th Young Scientists Meeting

Shanghai, China

PAGES' Open Science Meetings (OSM) and Young Science Meetings (YSM) are held every four years. They are designed to encourage interaction between scientists from all career levels, disciplines and regions. In 2025, the OSM and YSM will be held in Shanghai, China and online. 01 December 2023: Call for Sessions Open

PAGES 7th Open Science Meeting

Shanghai, China

PAGES' Open Science Meetings (OSM) and Young Science Meetings (YSM) are held every four years. They are designed to encourage interaction between scientists from all career levels, disciplines and regions. In 2025, the OSM and YSM will be held in Shanghai, China and online. 1 March 2025: Conference program, deadline for early registration

PalaeoArc 2025

Tromsø, Norway

PalaeoArc is an international network research programme. The scientific goal of this six-year programme is to understand and explain the climatically-induced environmental changes in the Arctic that have taken place throughout the Quaternary and continue in the present-day.

TMS-CFFR Foraminifera Spring meeting 2025

Gothenburg, Sweden

The title of the meeting will be “Foraminifera as a marine magnifying glass: tiny details, big insights from fossils to molecules” to reflect the various aspects of foraminiferal research ranging from paleo-approaches in climate and ocean research to experimental, AI-based and marine environmental studies, ecology, taxonomy, biogeography, phylogeny, as well as fossil applications in industry, […]

Second sedaDNA Scientific Society Meeting

Tromsø, Norway

We are very pleased to again highlight that the date of the 'Second sedaDNA Scientific Society Meeting" in Tromsø, Norway will be the 24-25th of June 2025 - so save those dates! ABSTRACT SUBMISSION CLOSES ON THE 10TH JANUARY 2025

IGS Symposia: Ice Streams and Outlet Glaciers

Durham, UK

Ice streams and outlet glaciers are important components of an ice sheet’s mass balance and their behaviour directly impacts on sea level. These corridors of fast-flowing ice have been described as the ‘arteries’ of an ice sheet and their distinction is largely semantic, with ice streams bordered by slower-moving ice and outlet glaciers bordered by […]

15th International Conference on Palaeoceanography

Bengaluru, India

We are thrilled to welcome you to Bengaluru (India) for the 15th International Conference on Palaeoceanography (ICP15) . We are looking forward to hearing about your latest research on past ocean, climate and Earth System processes over a range of timescales. Both proxy- and modelling-based approaches are welcome. The aim of the conference is to […]

The 16th International Paleolimnology Symposium

Aix-les-Bains, France

The goal of the IAL-IPA joint meetings is to celebrate research on lakes, from multiple perspectives, with a focus on the sediment record as both Earth System Archives and social and cultural memories of Human societies. This conference aims to bridge the gap across a broad range of disciplines that work within the overarching theme […]

37th Nordic Geological Winter Meeting (NGWM)

Turku, Finland

We hereby invite you to propose scientific sessions for the program of the 37th Nordic Geological Winter Meeting (NGWM), to be held in Turku, Finland, 13-15 January 2026. The NGWM community includes researchers from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden working on a broad range of disciplines in the geosciences and we aim to compile a program reflecting this […]

11th IAG international conference on geomorphology

Christchurch, New Zealand

We look forward to welcoming you to Christchurch New Zealand for the International Conference on Geomorphology in 2026. Tectonically-active, in the 'Roaring 40s' and geologically-young, Aotearoa New Zealand offers world-class geomorphology with some of the world’s fastest rates of uplift and erosion.