2025 BCRA Online Seminars via Zoom

Our monthly seminars are intended to promote the scientific importance of caves and karst, and they describe ways in which BCRA supports cave research. Some of these talks are jointly organised by BCRA and the Ghar Parau Foundation. GPF is a charity that provides grants to British caving expeditions throughout the world. These talks will use the Zoom platform.

If, as part of this series of seminars, you would like to offer a talk on a science topic that you think would be of interest to a broad caver audience then please contact John Gunn with a title and a few words about your suggested content.

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▼  Past Seminars in 2025

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#1 — Mon 13 Jan 2025

Microbial Nitrogen Cycling and Cave Passage Modification in Mulu National Park

With: J. Max Koether, Department of Geology, University of Alabama
Time: Mon 13-Jan 2025, 19:30 to 21:00 GMT.
To Watch: see Joining via Zoom.

Photo: J. Max Koether

Research into how caves form increasingly reveals the critical role of microbes in promoting chemical erosion through the production of acidic byproducts. The caves of Gunung Mulu National Park in Sarawak, Malaysia, offer a setting to explore a novel nitrogen-driven method of cave passage modification and enlargement. These caves include some of the world's largest and longest cave systems, including Clearwater Cave, which extends over 250 kilometers, and many of these caves feature unusual formations, such as massive ceiling scallops and corroded speleothems. We suggest that these distinctive features result from dissolution caused by microbial activity.

Microbial activity within the nitrogen-rich guano from birds and bats in the caves generates ammonia gas. This ammonia adheres to moisture on cave walls, where microbes recapture the ammonia and metabolize it, producing nitric acid as a byproduct and leading to the chemical dissolution of the rock. Using several analytical techniques, both in the field and in the lab, we propose that nitrogen-driven dissolution is a common process in tropical caves, and that this mechanism may play a significant role in enlarging cave passages after their initial formation.

Our Seminar Programme

#2 — Mon 10 Feb 2025  

Sulfuric Acid Speleogenesis: how can we recognize it and what can it teach us?

With: Jo De Waele, Professor, Dept. of Biological, Geological, and Environmental Sci., University of Bologna
Time: Mon 10-Feb 2025, 19:30 to 21:00 GMT.
To Watch: see Joining via Zoom.

Photo: Orlando Lacarbonara

Although sulphuric acid caves (SAS Caves) have been known of for over two centuries (Socquet described a SAS cave in Aix-les-Bains in 1801), these caves were considered as "geological oddities". They rank among the "hypogene" caves, and are important for the understanding of void formation not directly connected to present-day meteorology and surface morphology (e.g., hydrocarbon reservoirs, Mississippi valley type Pb-Zn ore deposits). Since the discovery of Lechuguilla Cave in New Mexico and Movile Cave in Romania (both in 1986) speleological and karstological research has intensified and many more SAS caves have been discovered and recognized.

Today over 90 SAS cave occurrences have been reported around the world, and their number is increasing steadily as cavers have started to recognize their typical morphologies and by-products. This talk, prepared in collaboration with Ilenia Maria D'Angeli, will show the distribution of SAS caves in the world, the different typologies, their unique morphology and by-products, their role in understanding landscape evolution, and their intriguing microbiology and biology.


#3 — Mon 10 Mar 2025   

Title not yet available

With: Christos Pennos
Time: Mon 10-Mar 2025, 19:30 to 21:00 GMT.
To Watch: see Joining via Zoom.

Abstract not yet available

#4 — Mon 14 Apr 2025   

Palaeontological Perspectives on Caving in Thailand

With: Spyridoula Pappa, Senior Curator of Fossil Mammals, Natural History Museum
Time: Mon 14-Apr 2025, 19:30 to 21:00 BST.
To Watch: see Joining via Zoom.

This is the talk postponed from December 2024

Photo: Spyridoula Pappa

If you want to know more about caves and fossil mammal remains from Mae Hong Son Province, in north-western Thailand, then join me for this talk where I am going to share everything from my most recent research fieldwork in Thailand, in January 2024.

One of the most interesting and important sites that I visited was Tham Lod rock shelter where I sampled teeth fron Eld's deer. Tham Lod is a magnificent and famous cave and a well-stratified archaeological site, where more than 100,000 archaeological items were unearthed during previous excavations. I and my NERC DTP PhD student Laura Hemmingham have had the opportunity to collect samples of over 200 fossil deer teeth, excavated from several Thailand caves and open sites.

Through the Eld's deer project we studied the diet of Pleistocene deer in relation to climate using the methods of dental wear analysis (DWA), mesowear and species distribution models. My research focuses on palaeoecology of the Quaternary and I am analysing tooth material to understand what these animals ate during the Ice Age and how they responded to environmental and ecological changes.

I started caving in 2002 and have participated in multiple caving expeditions with the Hellenic Speleological Society and with speleologists from Vienna University. I completed my undergraduate degree in Geology, and my Masters degree in Palaeontology, in Greece. My PhD in Palaeontology was from Royal Holloway University of London. I moved to London in 2010 and since September 2015 I have been working as a curator in the Natural History Museum (NHMUK). I am responsible for fossil mammals (over 350,000 specimens from around the world). During this talk I will be also presenting tales and projects that I had the opportunity to work on from other European and UK cave sites.


#5 — Mon 12 May 2025  

Title not yet available

With: Bethany Fox, Senior Lecturer, Dept. Biological and Geographical Sciences, Univ. of Huddersfield
Time: Mon 12-May 2025, 19:30 to 21:00 BST.
To Watch: see Joining via Zoom.

Abstract not yet available

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Seminars Archive

View talks given in 2021, 2022 (none), 2023, 2024, 2025.

Notes for Staff

▼  Notes for IT



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This page, http://bcra.org.uk/seminars2025.html was last modified on Wed, 15 Jan 2025 20:00:07 +0000