Project Locations

Locations of Major Field Activities

The two scales of field activities are the individual research projects that will be occurring throughout the list of 40+ countries above, and the locations of conferences/workshops for which there will be field correlation excursions. Although additional excursions will very likely be added as the project evolves, currently planned ones include the karst areas of Greece; Serbia and Montenegro; Utah, Kentucky, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, Colorado (US), China and/or England, Switzerland.

Locations of Major Laboratory Research

The majority of the research work done in this project will be by individual scientists or small research groups, as opposed to highly developed laboratories. However, key laboratories and institutes that have provided confirmation or are anticipated to include:

Hoffman Environmental Research Institute, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green USA

Karst Dynamics Laboratory of the Institute of Karst Geology of China, Guilin China

Anton Melik Geographical Institute, Scientific Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Ljubljana Slovenia

Limestone Research Group, Huddersfield University, Huddersfield England

Geologische Institut, University of Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe Germany

Centre d'Hydrogeologie, Universite de Neuchatel, Switzerland

Inst. de Recherches Geologiques et Geophysiques, Belgrad, Serbia

Energoprojekt, New Belgrade, Serbia

W.A.T.E.R.S. Laboratory, Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, USA

Environmental Research and Teaching Laboratory, University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA

University of Belgrade, Institute of Chemistry, Belgrade Serbia

University of Belgrade, School of Mining and Geology, Belgrade Serbia

Home

Project Contact: Chris Groves
Hoffman Environmental Research Institute, Department of Geography and Geology
Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, Kentucky 42101 USA
telephone: +1 270 745 5974 fax: +1 270 745 6410 email: igcp513@gmail.com

Webmasters: Pat Kambesis, Jessica Schmid and Mark Graham
Last Updated: November 2007