Paleoclimate data provides crucial insights into Earth's climate history, spanning millions of years. It utilizes various proxies like tree rings, ice cores, sediment layers, and fossil records to reconstruct past climates. These data reveal fluctuations in temperature, atmospheric composition, and sea levels, aiding our understanding of natural climate variability and long-term trends. Such insights are pivotal for predicting future climate scenarios and assessing the impacts of human activities on the environment. Paleoclimate research also helps validate climate models, providing a broader context for interpreting modern climate change. By studying ancient climates, scientists can unravel Earth's complex climate systems and their responses to natural and anthropogenic influences over geological time scales.
Title : Geotechnical ground investigation
Myint Win Bo, Toronto Metropolitan University , Canada
Title : Simultaneous Global Climate Change "Heat Waves" and microwave and radio-wave from Solar Flares
Shozo Yanagida, Osaka University, Japan
Title : How subsurface waters record the earth’s history
Leonid Anisimov, Volgograd State University, Russian Federation
Title : Landslides.Rainfall one of the main triggering factors in the mountainous regions of Puebla, Mexico.
Oscar Andres Cuanalo Campos, Universidad Popular Autónoma del Estado de Puebla, Mexico
Title : Geo Education exploratory learning sessions on field and underwater
Martina Gaglioti, LIPU, Italy
Title : Linking between color and element concentration for Fluorite: An optical spectroscopic approach
Ali Almohammed, Pandit Deendayal Energy University, India