News

JpGU Meeting 2013 Student Outstanding Presentation Awards were given

Student Outstanding Presentation Awards were given !

We are deeply grateful for all of your presentation of splendid research outcome. We would like to express our best wishes for your continued success on your research in the future.

Human Geosciences Section




Rupprecht Christoph


Griffith School of Environment, Griffith University


Appreciation of informal urban greenspace by Japanese and Australian residents





Hiroto Nagai

Nagoya University

An ALOS-derived glacier inventory of the Bhutan Himalaya




Mohammad Rajib


Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Saitama University


Variations in Adsorption Coefficient of 133Cs and 87Sr Caused by Oxidation of Pumice Tuff





Yuki Nakamura

he University of Tokyo

3D structural analysis of large-scale submarine landslide on a very gentle continental slope off Shimokita Peninsula




Keitaro Yamada

Kyoto University

Sedimentary environment during 3000 years recorded in the piston core sediments of Beppu Bay, central Kyushu, Japan




Yoshiki Sato

Kyushu University

Late Holocene environmental changes of the inter-ridge marshes in the western Hamamatsu strand plain



Akihiro Yokota

Nihon University

Eruption history of Tarumae volcano and tephras since 17th century found in Shiraoi-Tomakomai lowlands




Biogeosciences Section





















Mariko Harada

The University of Tokyo

Modeling the rise of oxygen after the Snowball earth: implications for the Paleoproterozoic manganese and iron formation

Kouhei Tokunaga

Hiroshima University

Application of selenium coprecipitated with barite as a new redox indicator

Keisuke Shimizu

The University of Tokyo

Molecular mechanisms of shell coiling in gastropods



Atmospheric, Ocean and Environmental Sciences Section













































Kota Okamoto

The University of Tokyo

Interhemispheric differences in the roles of SAO in mid- and high latitudes

Chikara Tsuchiya

he University of Tokyo

Propagation characteristics of gravity waves in the austral winter using the AIRS high resolution data

Ray Takatani

The University of Tokyo

Simulation of aerosol-cloud interactions in spring over East Asia using WRF-chem model : Comparison with aircraft obs.

Takashi Nakano

Kyoto University

cean response to typhoons moving toward north in the East China Sea

Kazunori Ebata

Yamanashi University

Developing and improving a simple runoff model of dissolved organic carbon considering soil infiltration and river runof

Yuki Yasuda

The University of Tokyo

A theoretical study on the mechanism for spontaneous gravity wave generation using the renormalized perturbation method

Satoki Tsujino

Nagoya University

Numerical Experiments for Concentric Eyewalls of Typhoon Bolaven (2012)



Solid Earth Section













































































































































Sho Aoki

Kyoto University

The estimation of S wave reflector in the northern Kinki region

Naho Otsuji

Niigata University

Sr and Nd isotope systematics of metacarbonate rocks as proxies for extinct oceans in continental collision zones

Akiko Takeo

The University of Tokyo

Shear-wave anisotropy in the crust and uppermost mantle beneath Japan from broadband array analysis of surface waves

Norihiro Nakata

Colorado School of Mines

Time-lapse changes in velocity and anisotropy after the 2011 Tohoku earthquake estimated by seismic interferometry

Kazutaka Yasukawa

The University of Tokyo

Geochemical features of deep-sea sediment in the eastern Indian Ocean: the first report of the Indian REY-rich mud.

Ryuichi Nomura

Tokyo Institute of Technology

Chemical evolution of basal magma ocean and mantle structure of the early Earth

Taro Nizato

Hiroshima University

Statistical hypothesis test for the detection of very low-frequency earthquakes in southwest Japan

Ryo Tanaka

Hokkaido University

Transition in eruption style during the 2011 eruption of Shinmoe-dake: implications from a steady conduit flow model

Shuto Sugai

The University of Tokyo

Roles of active faults for fluid-flow in the crust, examples from Chubu district, Japan

Shuji Terusawa

The University of Tokyo

Examination of noble gas concentration by percolation by using ceramic membrane

Kosuke Ishige

Hokkaido University

Geology and petrology of Taisetsu volcanic field ; Formation history and Transition of magma

Mamoru Ozaki

Ibaraki University

Geology and Petrology of the Post-caldera Stage Lava flows originated from Azuma-Kofuji cone, East Azuma volcano

Masakazu Fujii

The University of Tokyo

Magnetic Structure of Back-arc Spreading Axis with Hydrothermal Vents; the Southern Mariana Trough

Takashi Kuratomi

Kyushu University

he structure of chimney at iron-silica rich hydrothermal environment in shallow marine, Satsuma Iwo-Jima, Kikai caldera

Michiyo Sawai

Hiroshima University

Frictional behavior of incoming pelagic sediments to the Tohoku subduction zone

Kazuya Ishitsuka

Kyoto University

Surface displacements after the ground water regulation in Bangkok derived from persistent scatterer SAR interferometry

Takahiro Shiina

Tohoku University

P-wave velocity structure in the subducting crust of the Pacific plate beneath northeast Japan

Nao Yasuda

Kanazawa University

Experimental study of liquefaction and fluid transport

Masahiro Kobayashi


The University of Tokyo

Sedimentary pore fluid-like halogens and noble gases in mantle peridotites from the Western-Pacific subduction zones

Keisuke Yoshida

Tohoku University

Change in the stress field in the inland area of NE Japan after the 2011 Tohoku-Oki earthquake

Yusuke Oishi

Kochi University

H/V spectral analysis based on high density micro-tremor observations in Kochi Plain

Takafumi Nishiwaki

Hiroshima University

Microstructures and formation process of slickenside

Noriko Shiraishi

Ehime University

Phase relations and density changes in mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) under the lower mantle condition

Other News
Apr 17, 2024 To everyone affected by the 2024 Taiwan Earthquake (2024 0403 Hualien Earthquake)
Apr 12, 2024 Candidates for Executive Officers