Submissions closed on 15 October
Abstract guidelines:
Body of abstract:
The abstract should comprise between one and four paragraphs, and should have a maximum length of 400 words. The abstract should aim to succinctly describe the background, methodology, key results and the main conclusions drawn from these results (discussed in a context of the work conducted in previous studies, and in a context of the broad implications arising from the results). Kindly note that a maximum of three (3) abstracts will be accepted per primary/main author, and that the submitted abstracts should contain text only (i.e., no figures). Word count of 400 words needs to include any references.
References
Any references should be numbered in order of their appearance in the main body of the text. Abstract themes and sessions to choose from are listed below: Most of the suggested sessions from the planned 2020 event have been retained (see confirmed table below), and we are excited by the broad array of thematic areas that will be covered during this 2023 version of the event. Should your subject area not be well represented, please submit a session proposal by 20 June 2022.
Abstract themes and sessions to choose from are listed below:
Most of the suggested sessions from the planned 2020 event have been retained (see confirmed table below), and we are excited by the broad array of thematic areas that will be covered during this 2023 version of the event. Should your subject area not be well represented, please submit a session proposal by 20 June 2022.
Virtual poster presentations
Whilst we are encouraging delegates to attend in person, the LOC have decided to offer a hybrid option for delegates to participate on the Virtual platform that we will be providing to our virtual delegates. You may submit your poster as a virtual submission for review. Should you be accepted, we will require a PowerPoint presentation with voice over to display in the poster gallery on the app. Details and specification will be provided closer to the time once the review process is completed. In the meantime, if you cannot attend in person and would like to include your poster in the virtual space, please submit your abstract and indicate virtual poster as your presentation option. There will not be a specific time slot in the programme to present, however the posters will be available on the app during the congress and for 3 months after the event. All accepted virtual posters, will still be required to register for the congress in order for their poster to be displayed. The app will offer delegates the opportunity to connect with you directly through online chats and messages.
Virtual Oral presentation
Should you not be in a position to travel and would like to present an Oral presentation in the programme, we are offering limited slots for virtual orals. Please indicate when you submit your abstract if you would like to present a virtual oral presentation to be considered as part of the programme. Details of requirements will be emailed to you on acceptance. All accepted virtual oral presenters will still be required to register for the congress in order to present.
THEME |
TOPIC |
DESCRIPTION |
Environmental |
Geobiology |
Over Earth history,
the evolution of life has influenced the geosphere, and changes in the
geosphere, in turn, may have enabled or even triggered ecological change.
Geobiology is an emerging field that lies at the intersection between life
and the planet, merging disciplines such as microbiology, geochemistry,
sedimentology and palaeontology. South Africa has an incredibly rich fossil
record spanning the earliest microbial life, the rise of animals, and major
Phanerozoic radiations and mass extinctions, as well as a diverse modern
ecosystem. This session welcomes any work that contextualises the evolution
of life in South Africa. This could include, for example, sedimentological
evidence for increasingly arid conditions in South Africa during the
evolution of tetrapods; isotopic data that track
changes in oxygen availability in deep time; or new microfossils from Archean
stromatolites. We welcome contributions based on both ancient and modern
environments, from fields as diverse as genomics, isotope geochemistry,
phytoremediation, or ichnology. |
Acid mine drainage
and other mine pollution issues |
Acid mine drainage
has many far-reaching and detrimental impacts particularly in countries, such
as South Africa, which have long histories of mining and mineral resources
extraction. Several problems arising from this phenomenon include
mobilisation of deleterious elements under low pH conditions, changes to tracemetal speciation, dissolution of carbonate host and
the formation of sinkholes, negative impacts on crucial potable water
resources, among other forms of degradation to the natural environment. This
session aims to highlight the recent advancements in the science underpinning
our understanding of acid mine drainage and its remediation. Furthermore, the
session will accept abstracts related to other forms of environmental
degradation linked to anthropogenic and mining activity. This includes the
effects of airborne particulates on human health, and encompasses the broad
theme of medical geology. |
|
Environmental
Geochemistry |
This session
recognises the role of Earth Scientists in the Anthropocene. We invite
contributions from fundamental and interdisciplinary research, including (but
not limited to) chemical and medical geology, ecological modelling, soil and
atmospheric sciences, limnology and oceanography. The session is open to presentations
on observed changes resulting from human activities, quantifying
exposure-response relationships, understanding dynamics or solving
environmental issues from local stream pollution to global climate change.
Stakeholders and policy makers are most welcome to join this session. |
|
Geoscience for a
sustainable energy-environment nexus |
This session aims
to explore geoscience research in the field of energy, energy generation and
energy management with a focus on the link between a sustainable energy-environment
nexus. In particular, this session should welcome research looking into
renewable research and geoscience-climate mitigation. |
|
Climate,
environments and landscapes of Africa: Miocene, Pliocene, present
and future |
The African
continent is well established as the place of origin for humankind, with
abundant fossils of numerous hominin species that preceded, and co-existed
with our species Homo sapien discovered throughout
the continent. Fossil bearing sites in Southern Africa and especially South
Africa contain a number of early hominin species including Australopithecus
africanus, Australopithecus sediba, Paranthropus
robustus and early Homo. While the fossil evidence has shaped our
understanding of human evolution, the backdrop to such evolution is the
environment our early ancestors inhabited and the changes to their
surroundings in response to shifting climate. Evidence for this is preserved
in the deposits themselves, which range in age from Pliocene to Holocene.
Investigation of these sediments provides a unique opportunity to expand our
understanding of the intersection between human evolution and changing
environmental conditions. Thus, combining all geological research on these
deposits is essential for the complete understanding of the evolution of
hominin species in southern Africa and their movement into other parts and
out of Africa. This session will focus on all geological data (e.g. site description, sedimentology, geochemistry,
geochronology etc.) that help us understand the climate, environments and
landscapes of southern African recent geological and palaeoanthropological
history. The session is further open to those workers focussed on past-,
present- and future climate within the region, especially those focussed on
the agents of its change. We invite submissions, particularly those that
involve students and early career researchers, reporting on new results,
discoveries, techniques, innovative and multidisciplinary collaboration that
drive growth of southern African palaeoanthropology and the linkages with
modern and evolving climate. |
|
Current and future
outlook for Carbon Capture and Storage in South Africa and abroad |
As the global
response to the climate crisis appears to have reached some prevention
lethargy, with no signs of CO2 emissions slowing down. All stakeholders
(local and abroad) must, with renewed urgency, explore all possible measures
to avoid the looming GHG emission induced climate crisis. Carbon capture and
storage (CCS) has remained on the table as one of several mitigation
strategies contemplated and explored by South Africa since 2007.
Contributions by the geosciences remain at the heart of this discourse, and
the session aims to bring together all major workers on the topic to outline
CCS’s status quo and prospects. |
|
Advances in
Southern African Hydrogeology |
Southern Africa is
a water stressed region, and both climatic (rising average temperatures,
reduced rainfall, increased frequency and magnitude of extreme drought
events) and non-climatic (population growth and urbanisation) drivers are
placing increasing pressure on regional surface water resources. Groundwater
will (and does in some areas already) therefore play an increasingly
important role in meeting the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, through
providing sustainable water resources for municipal and rural drinking water
supply, agricultural irrigation, and mining/industrial activities. This
session aims to showcase innovative research and development by the private
sector and industry, universities and research institutions, and government
agencies across all facets of hydrogeological science in southern Africa,
including (but not limited to): aquifer parameter estimation and
characterisation, groundwater exploration, hydrogeophysics,
wellfield development, hydrochemistry, groundwater contamination and
remediation, numerical groundwater modelling, aquifer and
groundwater-dependent ecosystem monitoring, and groundwater management. |
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Energy |
Future of petroleum
geosciences in Southern Africa |
With the recent
increase in petroleum exploration in South Africa both on and offshore it is
important to understand what the hydrocarbon potential is in Southern Africa
and how it might shape the energy security in the country. Currently
feedstocks to industry in Gauteng and the Cape provinces seems to decrease
due to reduced supply. Can this trend be turned around by additional
exploration in South (southern) Africa and if so how. What is the remaining
hydrocarbon potential and what has to be done to unlock it. Is there enough
petroleum geosciences experience in South (southern) Africa for the future? |
Solid fossil fuel
resources |
The focus of the
session will be on various aspects of energy (non-nuclear), geoscience and geometallurgy
across the value-chain from exploration, exploitation, characterisation,
processing, and by-product assessment, as well as related environmental
issues. Coal accounts for one of the highest foreign exchange revenues for
South Africa, and continues to provide affordable energy access across the
world. South African energy production is dominated by coal, and, whilst
diversification is required in the energy mix, clean coal technologies across
the value-chain enable the continued use of this valuable natural commodity.
Coal has other applications beyond combustion for electricity, including the
metallurgical industry, cement industry, gasification, advanced carbons, and domestic use.
Advanced exploration and extraction, geometallurgical
developments, and holistic characterisation of this vital natural resource
are ongoing research areas globally and in South Africa. Southern Africa also
hosts other potential forms of hydrocarbon-based energy resources, including:
shale gas; natural gas; methane gas; and oil (petroleum). Coal by-products,
including ash, may be upgraded for use in novel applications. |
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Igneous |
Diamonds,
kimberlites and cratonic lithosphere: a session in
honour of John J. Gurney |
John Gurney’s
research interests spanned cratonic lithosphere
structure and evolution, mantle xenolith petrology and geochemistry,
kimberlite geology and indicator mineral chemistry, diamonds and diamond
inclusion studies. This session honours John’s scientific legacy by inviting
presentations on any of these topics, also including geophysical/tectonic
investigations of cratonic and circumcratonic
lithosphere, studies of marine and alluvial diamonds as well as diamond
exploration techniques and case studies in southern Africa and elsewhere. It
is hoped that the contributions will form the basis for a special section or
issue of the South African Journal of Geology. |
Advances in
Bushveld Petrogenesis and Ore Genesis |
Magmatic ore
deposits (massive sulphide bodies, chromitite and
Fe-Ti oxide layers, platinum group element-rich
horizons, etc.) associated with the Bushveld Complex and other layered
intrusions are essentially quite normal igneous rocks that are generated by
processes of magma differentiation, crystallization and solidification in
crustal chambers. Therefore a key to understanding
the origin of these deposits, the geological controls on the distribution of
the mineralisation and thus developing a better strategy for their
exploration can be achieved from a deeper knowledge of the physico-chemical processes that govern magma evolution in
crustal chambers. A strong emphasis in this session will therefore be put on
igneous petrology as a key discipline that provides answers to major
ore-related questions: Where are ore deposits located? How did they get
there? How were they produced? and What controls the limits of the
mineralisation? This session aims at bringing together researchers who study
igneous rocks by field observations, textural analysis, computer simulations,
mineralogical, geochemical, experimental and geophysical methods.
Contributions on all aspects of magma chamber processes and magmatic ore
deposits are welcome. |
|
Igneous beyond the
obvious |
The world is
endowed with a great diversity of igneous rocks, and South Africa is no
exception to this rule. However, most South African conferences focus their
attention primarily on the Bushveld Complex, kimberlites and Archaean
granulite-greenstone terranes, forgetting about the riches of the
Namaqua-Natal Belt, the Cape Granites, Mesoproterozoic alkaline complexes,
the Phalaborwa Complex and many more ‘gems’. Within the basaltic realm, South
Africa's geological heritage is furthermore blessed by several, more or less
large, igneous provinces, ranging from the oldest Dominion-Pongola to the
youngest Karoo LIP. This session thereby provides a forum for every igneous
subject that does not focus on South Africa’s Big Three. |
|
Felsic rocks of the
Bushveld complex: Petrogenesis and metallogeny |
The Lebowa Granite Suite and the Rooiberg
Group represent intrinsic and voluminous components of the Bushveld Complex
and yet they have received substantially less attention from researchers
world-wide than the mafic portions of this igneous province. Consequently,
the petrogenesis of the acid phases of the Bushveld and their relationship to
the better studied Rustenburg Layered Suite is still poorly understood.
Despite being prolifically mineralized, the acid phase metallotect
also receives scant attention from exploration companies. This session
invites papers and posters aimed at advancing our understanding of the
petrogenesis and metallogeny of the acid phases of the Bushveld Complex. |
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Metamorphic |
Differentiation of
the Earth’s crust at the metamorphic:igneous
interface |
The Earth’s crust
undergoes chemical differentiation though processes of partial melting, magma
emplacement, metamorphic devolatisation and
fractional crystallization amongst many others. These processes redistribute
chemical components within the crust thereby determining the crust’s
geochemical and rheological characteristics. This has wide reaching
implications from the tectonic evolution of the earth’s surface to the
development of economic deposits. This session aims to bring together a wide
array of techniques including geochemistry, geochronology, structural
geology, geothermobarometry and phase equilibria
modelling to answer the simple question “how does the crust differentiate”? |
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Earth Evolution |
Archaean Processes
and Environments |
This session
focusses on the evolution of the Archean Earth system. It explores geodynamic
crust-mantle processes and the emergence of plate-tectonics on the early
Earth. This includes investigating secular changes in the style of
metamorphic and igneous processes from the Eoarchaean
through to the Archaean-Paleoproterozoic boundary. It aims to investigate the
petrogenesis of felsic rocks in the earliest micro-continents, as well as the
origin and preservation of mafic-ultramafic oceanic lithosphere in cratonic nuclei. The session also encompasses the
earliest evidence for life in the Archaean rock record, ocean-atmosphere
biogeochemical cycling (C, N, S, transition metals) and life-sustaining
hydrothermal environments on the young Earth. |
The Proterozoic of
Africa |
The session covers
all the Proterozoic terrains in South Africa,
west Africa, Southern Africa and East Africa: The advantage of the session is
that it includes a wide coverage - from Damara to Eburnian
to Namaquan to Pan-African events including the
East African Orogeny of east Africa and middle east. Speakers from all
corners of the African continent are encouraged to submit an abstract. |
|
Central Africa |
Central Africa –
for variable reasons – arguably constitutes one of Earth’s geologically least
explored continents and thereby also holds the greatest potential for both
research and mineral resources. This special session and subsequent workshop
proposal for South Africa’s 2023 Geocongress aims
at (1) reviewing our current understanding of the geology of Central Africa,
encompassing an Archean Greater Congo Craton, internal and surrounding
Proterozoic mobile belts, as well as any Phanerozoic overprint; (2)
presenting ongoing research into any of these geological fields; and, in a
subsequent workshop, (3) explore future key targets, both in an economic and
scientific sense. Realizing that this is a relatively broad topic, both
geographically and scientifically, which falls outside the artificial
confines of South African geology, it is still believed to attract enough
interest to validate its existence, as a supplement to a Colloquium of
African Geology. Provided that enough submissions deem it to be necessary,
the session may be further subdivided into either geochronological
sub-sessions and/or sub-regions, chaired by appropriate specialists. |
|
Africa’s
Phanerozoic tectonic evolution and associated magmatism |
Africa is a special
continent, not only because it preserves a continental record of all of the
World’s four supercontinental cycles, exemplified
by Proterozoic orogenic terranes bounding ancient Archean cratons (focus of
other the other two “Earth Evolution” sessions), but because (1) it is
currently surrounded mostly by passive margins, (2) hosts the World’s largest
and most volcanically active East African continental rift, and (3) at least
four breakup-related Phanerozoic large igneous provinces (CAMP, Karoo,
Parana-Etendeka and Afar). This session therefore
focuses mainly on more recent and typically extensional (neo)tectonic
processes, with or without associated magmatism, which has affected (and is
affecting) the African continent during and since it was dismembered from the
Pangea/Gondwana supercontinent. Apart from providing more constraints on both
tectonic and magmatic processes, in general, the session encourages a
discussion on how much of this supercontinental
breakup, tectonism and associated magmatism may be linked to (1) an
underlying Tuzo large low shear velocity province
(LLSVP), its peripheral mantle plumes and even a central geoid high, and/or
how much may be attributed to (2) pre-existing lithospheric structures and
the continent’s varied lithology. |
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Planetary |
Planetary Geology:
Earth, Moon and Beyond |
Hypervelocity
impact events and planetary tectonics are two fundamental processes for
the formation and geological evolution of the planetary bodies
within the solar system. Impacts and tectonics shape planetary
surfaces and interiors, affect atmospheres, and are critical for the origin
and development of life. Impacts play critical roles in planetary evolution
by delivering the primary mineral and chemical constituents
to planets, re-melting and homogenizing crustal material, and by
blanketing planetary surfaces with impact craters. Tectonics
efficiently resurface terrestrial planets and natural satellites
within the solar system. On Earth, tectonic processes are responsible
for global geochemical cycles, volcanism, material differentiation, and the
evolution of the crust and mantle.The
influx of data from planetary missions hosted by numerous countries globally
allows for new insights into geological processes in the solar
system, and technological innovations which have allowed for new
understandings of impacts, notably in regard to terrestrial and lunar impact
craters and meteorites. This session focuses on the study of the geology
of planetary bodies in the solar system, including studies of
impact cratering processes, impact structures and meteorites, tectonics
of planetary bodies, global cycles, the origin of life and astrobiology, as
well as numerical and analog simulations of
planetary processes. Contributions dealing with these aspects of planetary
geology are welcome. |
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Ore and Structure |
Applied Mineralogy
Session |
Applied mineralogy
is intrinsic to the minerals value chain, from exploration to mining and
processing of various commodities, as well as in protection of the
environment. Investigations and development of a wide variety of industrial
and societal products require application of mineralogical principles.
Mineralogical studies additionally find application in society through
forensics and socio-economic-politic initiatives. Novel mineralogical
characterisation tools are often developed to address specific requirements.
The Mineralogical Association of South Africa invites contributions to
showcase these and other applications of mineralogy. The contributions can
include, but are not limited to, the development or application of new
mineralogical techniques, mineralogical case studies as well as studies and
comments on the past, present and future of applied mineralogy. |
Sediment-hosted ore
deposits |
Sediment-hosted ore
deposits contain significant quantities of important commodities on Earth.
Important examples include: iron and manganese in the Transvaal Supergroup of
South Africa; large-scale iron ore deposits in Western Australia, Brazil,
India and central Africa; gold in the Witwatersrand Basin and Tarkwaian Group; uranium in the Karoo Supergroup; heavy
mineral deposits in coastal sands and copper in the Copperbelt Province of
Zambia and the DRC; and base metal enrichments in the Aggeneys
region of South Africa to name a few. Great debate still exists today around
aspects of ore genesis of sediment-hosted ore deposits, for example the
placer versus hydrothermal models for conglomerate hosted gold deposits, the
nature of the enrichment that took place in the high grade
iron ore of the world as well as sedimentary depositional models for lower
grade manganese deposits. Additionally, numerous exploration projects on
sediment-hosted ore deposits are running in Africa, South America and Asia
which are still poorly constrained and understood. This session will provide
an opportunity for any research on sediment-hosted ore deposits, whether it
is on the regional geology, ore characterization, genetic models, exploration
or ore mineralogy, to be submitted for presentation. |
|
Ore-structure
relationships |
Exploration and
mining are increasingly focused on deeper, more structurally-complex,
poly-deformed prospects and deposits. This is particularly relevant for
gold, REE and base metal deposits that are currently being explored and
developed. The understanding, resolution and 3D modeling
of these complexities should form part of most feasibility and resource
studies. However, the development of a standardized set of requirements
or a universal workflow for interpreting, accurately representing and 3D
modelling of these controls on mineralization has yet to emerge. This
Session seeks to highlight the various approaches taken in resolving the
controls on mineralization in structurally-complex settings and the manner in
which robust structural analyses have been intelligently translated into 3D. |
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Tectonics, Seismology and
Geological Hazards. |
This general
session is intended for researchers working broadly on neotectonic
deformation, seismology and geological hazards. Studies which are based
in Africa, or which present methodologies which could be productively applied
to African case studies, are particularly encouraged. Suggested research
areas include studies of earthquakes through seismology and satellite
radar interferometry, seismic interferometry applications, seismic imaging,
experimental studies on the physical properties of fault rocks, geological
constraints on the evolution of fault systems and the processes controlling
brittle deformation, fault mapping through remote sensing, geophysical data
or field work, seismic hazard and risk analyses. Contributions from the
fields of earthquake engineering and mining seismicity are welcome, as are
contributions related to geological hazards more generally (including landsliding). |
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Sedimentary |
Detrital Zircon:
Methods, problems, applications |
U-Pb ages and other
isotope data from detrital zircon are important as a tool to trace provenance
of clastic sediments, determine the age of deposition, correlate between
sedimentary basins and to understand continental evolution. The
interpretation of data is, however, not unproblematic. A huge amount of
detrital zircon data of potential importance for the interpretation of
regional geology has now been accumulated. This session will invite contributions
related to any aspect of detrital zircon in clastic sediments, such as:
Methods of data collection, principles of interpretation, qualitative and
quantitative handling of data, the use of data to solve geological problems. |
Sedimentary basins
in Southern Africa |
The southern
African sedimentary rock record spans over 3 billion years capturing glimpses
of ancient environments, climates and evidence for life. It encapsulates
pivotal information contributing to, but not limited to, our understanding of
plate tectonics, the evolution of life and major mass extinction events. This
session focuses on the application of siliciclastic sedimentological methods
for answering questions related to basin evolution, basin stratigraphy
(including chemo-, chrono- and magnetostratigraphy),
resource potential, palaeoenvironmental
reconstructions, provenance and evidence for the evolution of life. We invite
abstracts addressing these topics and aspects related to the southern African
sedimentary record. |
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Society |
Geoscience and
society |
Geoscience
Education, Water for South Africa, Geoscience and natural hazards, Geoscience
communication, Geotourism, Geoheritage |
The Future
Geoscientist |
Geosciences and the
role of the geoscientist have changed in the last century. However, the rate
of change is now accelerating significantly due to innovation and new
technologies. These will continue to shape the way we conduct our work. What
will the future hold for a geoscientist? What will be our daily tasks and
responsibilities? Will our current skillset be useful, or do we require an
entirely new toolbox? Geometallurgy, machine
learning and artificial intelligence are making rapid leaps forward, and hyperspectral
scanning and online analyzers are collecting data
autonomously. How does this impact the
geoscience workflow and the role we play in it? Sea-floor mining, asteroid
mining and lunar mining are common themes at conferences. How will
geoscientists support these new challenges? Changing mining laws and social/
community pressures are threats to the future of mining. How will these
influence the future roll of the geoscientist? Geoscientists have always been
regarded as Indiana Jones type characters with wide brimmed hats, belts
stuffed with hammers, bottles and notebooks roaming the bush looking for
shiny rocks. Will this still be the case in 2050? |
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Open |
Open Session |
This session is for
everyone who feels that the topic of their presentation does not fit into any
of the other sessions, but is nevertheless something that would fall under
the broad subject of the geosciences. |
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