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Opening Session: Exploring Mars with Curiosity and Perseverance

Speaker – Kirsten L. Siebach, Ph.D., Rice University

Sunday, 26 September 2021, 4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m.  |  Denver, ColoradoMile High Room 2-3 - Colorado Convention Center

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The ultimate geoscience experience starts here! Join IMAGE ‘21 General Co-Chairs Julie Shemeta and Steve A. Sonnenberg as they kick off this inaugural event with an overview of the more than 1200 technical presentations that make IMAGE ‘21 the single most important and comprehensive event of the year for disseminating high-quality, applied-geoscience knowledge and data. Dr. Sonnenberg will introduce SEG President Maurice Nessim and AAPG President Gretchen Gillis who will give presidential addresses touching on the opportunities, challenges, and insights into the future of geosciences and energy. Sue Jackson, IMAGE ‘21 vice-chair will introduce the not-to-be-missed Keynote Speaker Kirsten L. Siebach. As a geologist on both the Curiosity and Perseverance Mars rover missions, Siebach will share the motivation and context for these missions, new and evolving understanding of neighboring planets, and how it teaches us about our own world during her talk titled "Exploring Mars with Curiosity and Perseverance".

Speaker

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Kirsten L. Siebach, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor, Rice University, Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences

Kirsten Siebach is an Assistant Professor in the Rice University Department of Earth, Environmental, and Planetary Sciences and calls herself a Martian Geologist. She researches "source-to-sink" sedimentary processes on Mars and early Earth to interpret the history of water and surface environments early in our solar system. She is currently a member of the Science and Operations Teams for the Mars 2020 rover Perseverance and the Mars Science Laboratory rover Curiosity, and previously worked on the science and engineering teams for the Phoenix Lander and the two Mars Exploration Rovers.

Kirsten completed her PhD in Geology at Caltech with Professor John Grotzinger with a dissertation titled “Formation and Diagenesis of Sedimentary Rocks in Gale Crater, Mars”, and then did postdoctoral research in geochemistry of Martian sediments with Professor Scott McLennan at Stony Brook University. Prior to Caltech, she attended Washington University in St. Louis, where she worked with Professor Ray Arvidson and graduated summa cum laude with a B.A. in Earth & Planetary Science and Chemistry.

She is also actively engaged in promoting education and outreach related to Earth and Planetary science and regularly presents at schools and outreach events.

Venue

Opening Session: Exploring Mars with Curiosity and Perseverance
Colorado Convention Center
700 14th St
Denver, Colorado 80202
United States

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