14-19 Jun 2015 Barcelonnette (France)

Sponsors

CNRS CNRS
The Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (National Center for Scientific Research) is a public organization under the responsibility of the French Ministry of Education and Research. As the largest fundamental research organization in Europe, CNRS carries out research in all fields of knowledge, through its ten institutes, including the National Institute for Earth Sciences and Astronomy (INSU) to which the organizers of the Joint Inversions in Geophysics are affiliated.
UFA / DFH UFA / DFH
Université franco-allemande / Deutsch-Französische Hochschule. The UFA/DFH is an expert in Franco-German relations. Its main objective is to reinforce the cooperation between France and Germany in the domains of higher education and research. It is constituted by a network of higher education establishments in France and Germany, and has initiated over 160 joint degrees in both countries.
Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
Kiel University is a university of interconnecting and interactive academic cultures. We consistently apply inter-disciplinary approaches to address major, cross-cutting social topics such as climate change, health and human development. This has attracted a dramatic rise in third-party funding, while also leading to numerous publications on the relative areas of research. At Kiel University we actively promote individual and collaborative research. The strength and proven excellence lies in our co-operations with non-university institutions, our coordinated academic projects and the pooling of infrastructural platforms.
IPGS IPGS
The Institut de Physique du Globe de Strasbourg (UMR 7516 CNRS / Université de Strasbourg) is an Earth Science laboratory, where research is focused around numerous themes in geophysics and geology. The laboratory currently regroups 127, including 55 researchers and faculty staff, and 52 PhD students and postdocs. A part of the research lead at IPGS is linked to the activities of the observatories in geophysics at EOST (seismology, magnetism, gravimetry and geodesy) and the scientific services (ReNaSS, BCSF, RLBM) that allow an efficient coupling between observation and research.
RHUM-RUM RHUM-RUM
RHUM-RUM (Réunion Hotspot and Upper Mantle - Réunions Unterer Mantel) is a French-German passive seismic experiment designed to image an oceanic mantle plume - or lack of plume - from crust to core beneath La Réunion Island, and to understand these results in terms of material, heat flow and plume dynamics.
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