Program

Schedule and Program

Arrivals, registration, and the icebreaker will begin at 5pm on May 20th at High Rollers.

The talks will officially begin at 9am on May 21st, in the auditorium.

Lightning Talks schedule will be confirmed closer to the conference, along with the official conference program booklet.

Scheduled coffee breaks and lunch will be provided by Banff Park Lodge.

Please find the updated schedule below:

Tuesday 20th May
Arrivals
Wednesday 21st May
The Archaeal and Bacterial Biosphere
[Archean Geobiology]
Thursday 22nd May
The Origin & Flourishing of Nucleated Cells
[Proterozoic Geobiology]
Friday 23rd May
The Age of Visible Life
[Phanerozoic Geobiology]
Saturday 24th May
Farewells & Departures
08:45Introduction to conference
08:55Introduction to Day 1 (student led)Introduction to Day 2 (student led)Introduction to Day 3 (student led)
09:00Joanne Boden

(St. Andrews University)

Microbial phosphorous cycling in the Precambrian
TBCKatie Maloney

(Royal Ontario Museum)

The Untold Story of the Burgess Shale: Searching for a Seaweed Revolution
09:30Elliott Mueller

(University of Colorado at Boulder)

Microbial fermentation: The hidden metabolism of Precambrian biogeochemistry and its imprint on carbon isotope records of lipids biomarkers
Zachary Adam

(University of Wisconsin at Madison)

Did Iron Suppress Eukaryote Emergence and Early Radiation?
Frankie Dunn

(Oxford University Museum of Natural History)

The early evolution of animal life & the generation of form
10:00Manuel Schad

(University of Alberta)

Tracing early primary production – What do trace metals tell us?
Heda Agić

(Durham University)

New insights into Palaeoproterozoic microbial ecosystems
Brandt Gibson

(University of Tennessee)

Exploring archaeocyaths in virtual environments
10:30Coffee breakCoffee breakCoffee break
11:00Nadja Drabon

(Harvard University)

Effect of a giant meteorite impact on Paleoarchean surface environments and life
Nabil Shawwa

(University of Regina)

Earth’s oldest terrestrial red beds as direct evidence for the Great Oxidation Event ca. 2.3 Ga
Silvina Slagter

(Universidad de O’Higgins)

Arsenic preservation in silica-rich deposits: insights from modern and Jurassic hydrothermal systems
11:30TBCDaniel Mills

(University of Munich)

The origin and earliest evolution of eukaryotes in the Proterozoic biosphere
Anna Waldeck

(Pennsylvania State University)

Marine sulphate captures a Paleozoic transition to a modern terrestrial weathering environment
12:00Chadlin Ostrander

(University of Utah)

The Archean sedimentary thallium isotope record: what is it trying to tell us?
Maxwell Lechte

(University of Melbourne)

Sedimentary zinc deposition in the Palaeoproterozoic: implications for the evolution of the oceans and biosphere
Tharika Liyanage

(Stanford University)

Finding a family for an orphan biomarker: Searching for modern, biological sources of cheilanthane molecular fossils
12:30Question period for all speakersQuestion period for all speakersQuestion period for all speakers
13:00LunchLunchLunch
14:00Pemberton Medal Talk 1 – Eva Stüeken

(University of St. Andrews)
Beveridge Medal Talk 1 – David Johnston

(Harvard University)
Garrels Medal Talk 1 – Timothy Lyons

(University of California at Riverside)
14:30Pemberton Medal Talk 2 – Benjamin Mills

(University of Leeds)
Beveridge Medal Talk 2 – Tanja Bosak

(Massechusetts Institute of Technology)
Garrels Medal Talk 2 – Andrew Knoll

(Harvard University)
15:00Nature Geoscience and Nature Communications Editors Q&AFrank Corsetti

“How not to blow the most important talk of your life”
TBC

“Don’t quit as we’ve all had hurdles?”
15:30Lighting TalksLighting TalksLighting Talks
16:00-18:00Lightning Talk Discussion SessionLightning Talk Discussion SessionLightning Talk Discussion Session
Evening EventsIcebreaker – Bowling, High RollersBanff Town Pub Crawl