[GRASS-user] Geomorphometry (Sept, 7-11) 2011 (Conference + Workshops)

Apologies for cross-posting.

FIRST ANNOUNCEMENT AND CALL FOR PAPERS



Geomorphometry 2011: Five days of Digital Terrain Analysis




web: http://geomorphometry.org/2011



e-mail: 2011@geomorphometry.org








September 7-11, 2011 (Wednesday to Sunday)








ESRI Campus Redlands, California, USA








PROGRAM CHAIRS

1. John P. Wilson, University of Southern California
1. Michael Gould, ESRI
1. Ian S. Evans, Durham University
1. Tomislav Hengl, Wageningen University and Research


KEY DATES

- Workshop proposals due: December 2010
- Extended abstracts due: 1 March 2011
- Notification of acceptance: 1 April 2011
- Final camera-ready digital manuscripts due: 1 May 2011
- Author registration deadline: 15 May 2011
- Early registration deadline: 15 May 2011



AIMS AND SCOPE

The aim of Geomorphometry 2011 is to bring together researchers to present and discuss recent developments in the field of quantitative modelling and analysis of elevation data. Geomorphometry is the science of quantitative land-surface analysis and description at diverse spatial scales. It draws upon mathematical, statistical and image-processing techniques and interfaces with many disciplines including hydrology, geology, planetary geomorphology, computational geometry, geomorphology, remote sensing, geographic information science and geography. The conference aims to attract leading researchers in geomorphometry presenting methodological advances in the field and to provide young researchers with an opportunity to present new results.



The Geomorphometry 2011 conference will continue a series initiated by the Terrain Analysis and Digital Terrain Modelling conference hosted by Nanjing Normal University in November 2006 and University of Zurich in 2009.








Possible topics include, but are not limited to:

- Extraction of land-surface parameters from DEMs
- Implications of novel DEM data sources
- Identification and classification of land-surface objects
- Uncertainty in geomorphometry
- Planetary geomorphometry
- Processing of LiDAR data
- Semantics of land-surface description
- 3D visualisation in geomorphometry
- Implications of scale and resolution
- Flow and hydrological modelling using DEMs
- Efficient methods for application to large data sets
- Novel applications of geomorphometry





WORKSHOPS

Geomorphometry will host up to three workshops, each with 15-30 attendees after the conference (weekend). We invite applications to host a workshop on a theme related to the main conference. Workshops should primarily take the form of either tutorials in a particular method or technique, or provide the opportunity for detailed discussion of upcoming topics. They should not simply be mini-conferences. If you are interested in organising a workshop, please submit your proposal by 1st of January 2011 using this webform. The workshops will be selected based on the sign-ups (after March 2011). A minimum requirement to run a workshop is to collect 10 sign-ups. Based on the registrations received, the conference organizers will partially refund some of the conference costs for the workshop organizers (note: workshop organizers do need to register for the conference and pay the registration fees!).








SUBMISSIONS



Prospective authors are invited to submit extended abstracts of up to 4 pages (ca 2000 words) by 1st of March 2011. Extended abstracts must be original works by the authors, not be currently under review in the same form by another outlet and not submitted elsewhere prior to the notification date.



- Author guidelines






SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE

1. Alexander Brenning, University of Waterloo, Canada
1. Keith Clarke, UCSB, USA
1. Lucian Dragut, University of Salzburg, Austria
1. Ian Evans, Durham University, UK
1. Peter Fisher, University of Leicester, UK
1. Igor V. Florinsky, Institute of Mathematical Problems of Biology, Russia
1. John Gallant, CSIRO, Australia
1. Carlos H. Grohmann, University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
1. Michael Gould, ESRI, USA
1. Steve Kopp, ESRI, USA
1. Mark Kumler, University of Redlands, USA
1. Robert A. MacMillan, ISRIC, the Netherlands
1. David Maidment, University of Texas at Austin, USA
1. Helena Mitasova, North Carolina State University, USA
1. David Montgomery, University of Washington, USA
1. Brian Lees, University of New South Wales, Australia
1. Allan James, University of South Carolina, USA
1. Takashi Oguchi, University of Tokyo, Japan
1. Scott Peckham, Rivix, USA
1. Hannes I. Reuter, GISxperts, Italy
1. David Tarboton, Utah State University, USA
1. Nicolas Tate, University of Leicester, UK
1. Sebastiano Trevisani, CNR IRPI, Italy
1. Lynn Usery, USGS Center for Excellence for GIS, USA
1. John P. Wilson, University of Southern California, USA
1. Jo Wood, City University, UK
1. Ross Purves, University of Zurich, Switzerland
1. Qiming Zhou, Hong Kong Baptist University, Hong Kong





Prof. Carlos Henrique Grohmann - Geologist D.Sc.
Institute of Geosciences - Univ. of São Paulo, Brazil
http://www.igc.usp.br/pessoais/guano
http://lattes.cnpq.br/5846052449613692
Linux User #89721


Can’t stop the signal.