(Press-News.org) FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
9 May 2025
The Geological Society of America
Release No. 25-06
Contact: Katie Busser
+1-303-357-1044
kbusser@geosociety.org
Boulder, Colo., USA: The Geological Society of America (GSA) invites scientists, researchers, and professionals from across the globe to submit abstracts for its annual meeting, GSA Connects 2025, taking place 19–22 October 2025 in San Antonio, Texas, USA.
Held annually, GSA Connects is one of the premier international gatherings in the geoscience community, offering a dynamic platform for sharing cutting-edge research and fostering interdisciplinary dialogue. This year’s meeting will focus on three key themes shaping the future of geoscience:
Energy and Resource Innovation in the 21st Century
From Earth to the Cosmos: Geoscience Beyond Our Planet
Geology without Borders
Abstracts are welcomed across a wide range of topics and may be submitted to nearly 200 specialized technical sessions. For research that does not align with a specific session, authors may submit under a general discipline.
Whether addressing Earth's dynamic systems, exploring planetary geology, or advancing sustainable solutions for global challenges, GSA Connects 2025 encourages participation from all corners of the scientific community.
New this year, GSA is introducing an early abstract submission option, with a deadline of 15 May 2025. This early decision timeline is designed to support all authors—especially those traveling internationally—by offering additional time to schedule visa interviews, book flights and accommodations, and plan their conference participation.
Early Option Submission Deadline:15 May 2025
Final Submission Deadline: 5 August 2025
Submit Abstracts: https://connects.geosociety.org/program/technical-sessions/abstracts
Meeting highlights will include:
Pardee Keynote Symposia featuring invited speakers on transformative geoscience topics
Special Lectures and Presidential Address
A robust technical program with oral, lightning, and poster sessions spanning dozens of geoscience disciplines
Field experiences exploring the unique geology of central Texas and surrounding areas
GSA is committed to hosting an inclusive, professional, and accessible meeting. Participants are expected to abide by GSA’s Events Code of Conduct. Registration and hotel booking will open in June 2025. For ongoing updates and full meeting information, visit https://connects.geosociety.org.
About the Geological Society of America
The Geological Society of America (GSA) is a global professional society with more than 17,000 members across over 100 countries. As a leading voice for the geosciences, GSA advances the understanding of Earth's dynamic processes and fosters collaboration among scientists, educators, and policymakers. GSA publishes Geology, the top-ranked geoscience journal, along with a diverse portfolio of scholarly journals, books, and conference proceedings—several of which rank among Amazon’s top 100 best-selling geology titles.
###
END
Call for abstracts: GSA Connects 2025 invites geoscientists to share groundbreaking research
2025-05-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
The skinny on fat, ascites and anti-tumor immunity
2025-05-09
MAY 9, 2025, NEW YORK – A Ludwig Cancer Research study has identified a key mechanism by which advanced ovarian cancers suppress anti-tumor immune responses and resist immunotherapies. Led by Ludwig Princeton’s Lydia Lynch and reported in the current issue of Science Immunology, the study details how ascites fluid—produced in large quantities as ovarian cancer spreads from the ovaries into the abdomen and its organs—sabotages cytotoxic lymphocytes, a class of immune cells that kill cancer cells.
“Although ascites fluid has long been known to be immunosuppressive, it has not been clear what precisely gives it that property,” explained Lynch. “We discovered ...
New film series 'The Deadly Five' highlights global animal infectious diseases
2025-05-09
The EU-funded WiLiMan-ID project (https://www.wiliman-id.eu/) is excited to announce the launch of a brand-new short film series, The Deadly Five. This series is aimed at raising awareness of five critical animal infectious diseases, classified as high priority. Each film in the series focuses on a different disease and the experts studying and fighting them, highlighting the risks each disease poses to animal and public health, as well as the strategies being developed to mitigate their impact.
“Through this series, we aim at bringing ...
Four organizations receive funds to combat food insecurity
2025-05-09
DALLAS, May 7, 2025 — One in eight U.S. households struggles to access enough food, and that number is on the rise.[1] The American Heart Association is building on its 100 years of lifesaving service to fund social enterprises to sustainably improve this driver of health and change the future of health for all.
To that end, the Bernard J. Tyson Impact Fund, part of American Heart Association Ventures’ Social Impact Funds, is distributing $900,000 to four organizations:
Attane Health, based in Kansas City, Missouri, provides access to personalized, nutritious groceries and educational resources for those living with chronic health conditions;
Farm Generations Cooperative, ...
Ultrasound unlocks a safer, greener way to make hydrogels
2025-05-09
Researchers at McGill University, in collaboration with Polytechnique Montréal, pioneered a new way to create hydrogels using ultrasound, eliminating the need for toxic chemical initiators. This breakthrough offers a faster, cleaner and more sustainable approach to hydrogel fabrication, and produces hydrogels that are stronger, more flexible and highly resistant to freezing and dehydration. The new method also promises to facilitate advances in tissue engineering, bioadhesives and 3D bioprinting.
Hydrogels are gels composed of polymers ...
Antibiotics from human use are contaminating rivers worldwide, study shows
2025-05-09
Millions of kilometres of rivers around the world are carrying antibiotic pollution at levels high enough to promote drug resistance and harm aquatic life, a McGill University-led study warns.
Published in PNAS Nexus, the study is the first to estimate the scale of global river contamination from human antibiotics use. Researchers calculated that about 8,500 tonnes of antibiotics – nearly one-third of what people consume annually – end up in river systems around the world each year even after in many cases ...
A more realistic look at DNA in action
2025-05-09
Most scientists look at DNA behavior in isolation, without considering how matter within a cell interacts with DNA
Researchers observed DNA strand separation preceding replication and repair suppressed by molecules pushing strands together
Findings challenge the standard in biochemical practice of heating DNA to separate strands
EVANSTON, Ill. --- By creating a more true-to-life representation of DNA’s environment, researchers at Northwestern University have discovered that strand separation — the essential process a “resting” double helix undergoes before it can initiate replication or make repairs — may take more mechanical force ...
Skia: Shedding light on shadow branches
2025-05-09
What happens when trailblazing engineers and industry professionals team up? The answer may transform the future of computing efficiency for modern data centers.
Data centers house and use large computers to run massive amounts of data. Oftentimes, the processors can’t keep up with this workload because it’s taxing to predict and prepare instructions to carry out. This slows the flow of data. Thus, when you type a question into a search engine, the answer generates more slowly or doesn’t provide the information you need.
To remedy this issue, researchers at Texas ...
Fat-rich fluid fuels immune failure in ovarian cancer
2025-05-09
New research led by Irish scientists has uncovered how lipid-rich fluid in the abdomen, known as ascites, plays a central role in weakening the body’s immune response in advanced ovarian cancer. The findings offer new insights into immune suppression in ovarian cancer and open promising avenues for future immunotherapy approaches.
Over 70% of patients with ovarian cancer are diagnosed at an advanced stage, often presenting with large volumes of ascites. This ascites fluid not only supports the spread of cancer throughout the abdominal cavity but also ...
The origins of language
2025-05-09
To the point
Chimpanzees are capable of complex communication: The human capacity for language may not be as unique as previously thought. Chimpanzees have a complex communication system that allows them to combine calls to create new meanings, similar to human language.
Combining calls creatively: Chimpanzees use four ways to change meaning when combining single calls into two-call combinations, including compositional and non-compositional combinations, and they use a large variety of call combinations in a wide range of contexts.
Origins of language: The discovery of a complex communication system in chimpanzees has important ...
SNU-Harvard researchers jointly build next-gen swarm robots using simple linked particles
2025-05-09
Seoul National University College of Engineering announced that a joint research team from Seoul National University and Harvard University has developed a next-generation swarm robot system inspired by nature—capable of movement, exploration, transport, and cooperation, all without the need for precise sensors or centralized control.
The study was led by Professor Ho-Young Kim, Dr. Kyungmin Son, and master’s student Kwanwoo Kim at SNU’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Professor L. Mahadevan and Dr. Kimberly Bowal at Harvard. Their approach connects simple, active ...