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EarthHES2024

International conference "Earth as a Human-Environmental System: Challenges and Dynamics"

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Conference programme

Conference programme

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CONFERENCE PROGRAMME (download)

SESSIONS PROGRAMME (download)

BOOK OF ABSTRACTS (download)

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Monday (6.05.2024)

Location: Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Campus of the 600th Anniversary of the Jagiellonian University Revival, 7 Gronostajowa St.

Didactic-Library Complex, lecture room: Main Aula

 

9:00-10:00 – registration

10:00-10:30 – Conference opening

 

10:30-12:00 – Plenary keynote session 1

10:30-11:00 Prof. Dagmar Haase (Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research, Leipzig, and Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany): Urban ecosystem: Services and conflicts

11:00-11:30 Dr. Estela Nadal-Romero (El Instituto Pirenaico de Ecología, IPE-CSIC, Zaragoza, Spain): Soils in the Anthropocene: Hazards, challenges and opportunities

11:30-12:00 Prof. Jens-Christian Svenning (Aarhus University, Denmark): Dynamic land use changes: opportunity for rewilding?

12:00-12:30 – coffee break

 

12:30-14:00 – Plenary keynote session 2

12:30-13:00 Prof. Stefan Brönnimann (University of Bern, Switzerland): Climate change: Detection and impacts

13:00-13:30 Prof. Chiara Rabbiosi (University of Padova, Italy): Tourism (Re)configured: Geographical Thinking in Tourism Studies

13:30-14:00 Discussion

14:00-15:00 – Lunch

 

15:00-16:30 – Thematic sessions, time slot 1
Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, lecture rooms: 1.21, 1.23, 1.25, 1.26

 

Session 1: Urban ecosystem: Services and conflicts
Lecture room 1.21

  1. Changes in urban ecosystems

Chairperson: Katarzyna Gorczyca

POSTERS (15:00-15:10):

  1. Julia Gorzelany, Tomasz Noszczyk, Anita Kukulska-Kozieł, Józef Hernik, Social ecosystem services provided by urban green spaces – experiences from Krakow
  2. Klaudia Plac, Thermal-sensitive city users and the microclimate of human habitats. Thermal comfort, safety and urban fabric planning in the selected Polish cities

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

15:10-15:30 Katarzyna Krasnodębska, Przemysław Śleszyński, Andrzej Affek, Systematic mapping on modelling systemic changes in urban growth models - preliminary results

15:30-15:50 Matej Wagner, Veronika Kvetonova, Michal Lehnert, Application of the 3-30-300 rule in Czech cities

15:50-16:10 Veronika Kvetonova, Michal Lehnert, Jiri Panek, Jan Geletic, Petr Simacek, Different perspectives on the identification of urban thermal hotspots and coolspots, using the example of Prague

16:10-16:30 Agata Lewandowska, Justyna Chodkowska-Miszczuk, Jagoda Ulewicz, Just transition - theory and practice. An example of an unfinished nuclear power plant in Żarnowiec, Poland

 

Session 2: Soils in the Anthropocene: Hazards, challenges and opportunities
Lecture room 1.26

Chairpersons: Anita Bernatek-Jakiel, Łukasz Musielok

POSTERS (15:00-15:20):

  1. Anna Bucała-Hrabia, Rafał  Kroczak, Tomasz Bryndal, Mapping sensitivity to land degradation in a small catchment using a modified MEDALUS method (Polish Carpathians)
  2. Maciej Liro, Anna Zielonka, Tim H.M. van Emmerik, Rivers as macroplastic fragmenters
  3. Anna Zielonka, Maciej Liro, Global riverine macroplastic hotspots
  4. Beata Łabaz, Alfred E. Hartemink, Yakun Zhang, Annalisa Stevenson, Cezary Kabała, Organic carbon in Mollisols of the world - a review
  5. Patrycja Kramarczuk, Wojciech Szymański, Influence of vegetation on soil organic matter composition and spectroscopic properties in the subalpine zone of the Bieszczady Mountains (Eastern Carpathians).

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

15:20-15:40 Maciej Liro, Anna Zielonka, Tracking macroplastic fragmentation across world biomes

15:40-16:00 Milica Kašanin-Grubin, Nevena Antić, Snežana Štrbac, Sanja Stojadinović, Vukašin Rončević, Nikola Živanović, Soil dynamics in an urban forest as a result of parent material and land use

16:00-16:20 Anita Bernatek-Jakiel, Matthias Vanmaercke, Jean Poesen, Anna Biernacka, Pasquale Borrelli, Anastasiia Derii, Joanna Hałys, Joseph Holden, Gergely Jakab, Michał Jakiel, Panos Panagos, Dawid Piątek, Taco H. Regensburg, Jan Rodzik, Estela Nadal-Romero, Mateusz Stolarczyk, Els Verachtert, Patryk Wacławczyk, Wojciech Zgłobicki, Susceptibility to piping erosion in Europe

16:20-16:40 Dawid Piątek, Anita Bernatek-Jakiel, How does ski infrastructure change soil erosion processes on hillslope?

16:40-17:00 Łukasz Musielok, Marek Drewnik, Mateusz Stolarczyk, Wojciech Szymański, Assessing the effect of windthrows on soil organic carbon storage in different soil types – a case study in the Tatra Mountains, Southern Poland

 

Session 3: Dynamic land use changes: opportunity for rewilding?
Lecture room 1.23

Chairperson: Jacek Kozak

POSTERS (15:00-15:50):

1. Adriana Marcinkowska-Ochtyra, Adrian Ochtyra, Krzysztof Gryguc, Multitemporal satellite data as a potential for mapping mountain vegetation

2. Maciej Misztal, Functional mix on a city scale - the example of Warsaw

3. Małgorzata Kijowska-Strugała, Witold Bochenek, Sabina Wójcik, Tomasz Szydłowski, The impact of land use change on river water quality, an example from the Polish Western Carpathians

4. Maksymilian Solarski, The impact of contemporary hard coal exploitation on the development of subsidence basins in the Upper Silesian Coal Basin

5. Wojciech Haska, Maciej Liro, Paweł Mikuś, Elżbieta Gorczyca, Road-side delivery of household waste to fluvial systems - the case of Kamienica Gorczańska catchment (Polish Carpathians)

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

15:50-16:10 Anton Van Rompaey, Lisa-Marie Hemerijckx, Towards a new landscape typology for the analysis of rural abandonment in Europe

16:10-16:30 Wiesław Ziaja, Natural rewilding of the Sørkappland (Spitsbergen) coastal landscape

 

Session 4: Climate change: Detection and impacts
Lecture room 1.25

  1. Climate variability 1

Chairperson: Agnieszka Wypych

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

15:00-15:20 Marián Melo, Martin Gera, Samuel Radič, Climate trends and climate change scenarios in Slovakia until 2100

15:20-15:40 Ewa Łupikasza, Changing probabilities of days with snowfall and rainfall in the Atlantic Arctic under the climate warming

15:40-16:00 Joanna Wibig, Are heatwaves and drought more likely to occur simultaneously with warming?

16:00-16:20 Zbigniew Ustrnul, Jan Rehor, Agnieszka Wypych, Atmospheric circulation classifications for Central Europe - inventory approach

POSTERS (16:20-16:30):

Julia Sałaja, Polina Danchenkova, Changes in the duration of snow cover extent in Central Europe (1951-2022)

Jakub Słotwiński, Urban heat island in the Górnośląsko-Zagłębiowska Metropolis: modelling the intensity and spatial extent of the phenomenon

19:00 – Conference Dinner

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7.05.2024, Tuesday

Location: Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Campus of the 600th Anniversary of the Jagiellonian University Revival, 7 Gronostajowa St.

Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, lecture rooms: 1.21, 1.23, 1.25, 1.26

9:00 - 10:00 – registration

 

10:00-11:30 – Thematic sessions, time slot 2
Institute of Geography and Spatial Management, lecture rooms: 1.21, 1.23, 1.25, 1.26

 

Session 1: Urban ecosystem: Services and conflicts
Lecture room 1.21

  1. Green urban areas: services and conflicts

Chairperson: Bolesław Domański

10:00-10:20  Agata Warchalska-Troll, Paweł Pistelok, Anna Zielonka, When green meets compactness. In search for good practices of and challenges for implementing a green compact city idea in four Polish cities

10:20-10:40 Marcin Rechciński, Joanna  Tusznio, Małgorzata Grodzińska-Jurczak, Urban protected areas within a complex social-ecological system: Navigating conflict determinants through spatial indicator clustering and analysis of residents’ perceptions

10:40-11:00 Agnieszka Nowak-Olejnik, Jarosław Działek, Joanna Hibner, Justyna Liro, Rafał Madej, Martin Sudmanns, Dagmar Haase, Exploring Cultural Ecosystem Services and Disservices in Urban Green Spaces

11:00-11:20 Katarzyna Gorczyca, Łukasz Fiedeń, Agnieszka Świgost Kapocsi, Magdalena Miśkowiec, Anna Sławik, Jacek Strojny, Green urban areas – places for building resilient communities or places where conflicts burn out?

11:20-11:30 Discussion

 

Session 3: Dynamic land use changes: opportunity for rewilding?
Lecture room 1.23

3.2. Rewilding in Central Europe

Chairperson: Ewa Grabska-Szwagrzyk

10:00-10:20 Roman Gula, Katarzyna Bojarska, Dominik Kaim, Jacek Kozak, Mahsa Shahbandeh, Joanna Toczydłowska, Renaturalization and wolf habitat

10:20-10:40 Dominik Kaim, Michał Jakiel, Piotr Szubert, Volker Radeloff, Decline in the wildland-urban interface as opportunity for rewilding

10:40-11:00 Aleksandra Zwolska, Marek Półrolniczak, Leszek Kolendowicz, Urban Growth's Implication on Land Surface Temperature in a Medium-Sized European City based on LCZ classification

11:00-11:20 Adam Babuljak, Raquel Nogueira Rizzotto Falcão, Josef Krása, Tomáš Dostál, Římov Catchment: A Chronicle of Land-Use Transformations and Their Hydrologic Impacts

11:20-11:30 Discussion

 

Session 4: Climate change: Detection and impacts
Lecture room 1.25

  1. Climate variability 2

 Chairperson: Joanna Wibig

10:00-10:20 Miloslav Muller, Marek Kašpar, Czech and Central-European extreme weather events since 1961

10:20-10:40 Kristina Szaboova, Correlation between increasing average temperature and increasing sultry days in one of the hottest places in Slovakia

10:40-11:00 Zuzanna Bielec-Bąkowska, Long-term variability of air masses temperature in Kraków (1961-2023)

11:00-11:30 Discussion

 

Session 5: Tourism (Re)configured: Geographical Thinking in Tourism Studies
Lecture room 1.26

5.1.

Chairperson: Joanna Hibner

POSTERS (10:00-10:30):

  1. Vladimir Cech, Jana Vaskova, Radoslav Klamar, Adventure tourism development in Slovakia (on the example of hunting tourism and via ferrata´s climbing)
  2. Justyna Liro, The interdependencies of religious tourists’ attributes in the light of contemporary socio-cultural changes
  3. Justyna Liro, Anna Zielonka, Magdalena Kubal-Czerwińska, Elżbieta Bilska-Wodecka, Izabela  Sołjan, Aneta Pawłowska-Legwand, The relations of the religiosity components and participation in religious and spiritual tourism of young adults- Generation Z

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

10:30-10:50 Adela Malak, Tourist experience of the national parks in Poland

10:50-11:10 Weronika Michalska, Comparison of tourism potential of ZOO Wroclaw and Warsaw Zoological Garden

11:10:11:30 Discussion

11:30-12:00 – Coffee break

 

12:00-13:30 – Thematic sessions, time slot 3

 

Session 1: Urban ecosystem: Services and conflicts
Lecture room 1.21

  1. Green transformation. Just plants or more?

Chairperson: Agnieszka Nowak-Olejnik

POSTERS (12:00-12:30):

  1. Małgorzata Pietrzak, Małgorzata  Luc, HEXAGEODESIGN GAME – an educational hierarchical game about public space
  2. Sylwia Kulczyk, Piotr Matczak, Iwona Zwierzchowska, Michał Litwiński, Krzysztof Mączka, Alina Gerlée, Marta Derek, Ecosystem Services-Based Planning and Management of Multifamily Residential Areas: Bridging Practitioners' Approaches and Residents' Preferences
  3. Łukasz Gręda, Capitals and biggest cities – different ways to measure distance between countries
  4. Anna Kropyvnytska, Maksymilian Łepek, Mateusz Mirlak, Arleta Pająk, Marta Skupińska, Arkadiusz Wróbel, Jadwiga Gałka, Integration of immigrants with local society in the Berlin

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

12:30-12:50 Anna Avdiushchenko, Urban circular development and post-war green recovery: connections between concepts

12:50-13:10 Jakub Taczanowski, Arkadiusz Kołoś, Łukasz Fiedeń, Robert Guzik, Adam Parol, Krzysztof Gwosdz, Jakub Łodziński, Implementation of electromobility in public transport in the context of sustainable urban development and climate change challenges. The case of Poland

13:10-13:30 Discussion

 

Session 3: Dynamic land use changes: opportunity for rewilding?
Lecture room 1.23

3.3. Land cover remote sensing

Chairperson: Dominik Kaim

12:00-12:20 Zuzana Pazurova, Šimon Opravil, Robert Pazur, Hotspots of land cover change in national parks and their buffer zones in the last 20 years in Slovakia

12:20-12:40 Adrian Ochtyra, Adriana Marcinkowska-Ochtyra, Krzysztof Gryguc, Edwin Raczko, Satellite imagery for monitoring changes in natural environment

12:40-13:00 Katarzyna Cegielska, Anita Kukulska-Kozieł, Józef Hernik, Human-environemntal relation as a component of identification and assessment of areas susceptible to changes in land use and land cover

13:00-13:20 Paulina Pisarczyk, Ewa Bubula, Ewa Grabska-Szwagrzyk, Land cover dynamics in Połaniec town over the last two decades seen from aerial imagery

13:20-13:30 Discussion

 

Session 4: Climate change: Detection and impacts
Lecture room 1.25

4.3 Urban climate

Chairperson: Ewa Łupikasza

12:00-12:20 Marta Róg, Hottest days of summer 2023 in Kraków – what they tell us about interconnections between Biotope Area Factor, Land Surface Temperature, and Urban Heat Island

12:20-12:40 Jan Geletic, Pavel Krc, Jaroslav Resler, Martin Bures, Hynek Reznicek, Michal Belda, The complex role of trees as the most popular heat wave mitigation measure in Czech cities

12:40-13:00 Anita Bokwa, Mateusz Durka, Piotr Sekuła, Quantitative evaluation of the impact of land form and urban structure on UHI intensity spatial pattern in Kraków, Poland

13:00-13:30 Discussion

 

Session 5: Tourism (Re)configured: Geographical Thinking in Tourism Studies
Lecture room 1.26

5.2

Chairperson: Magdalena Kubal-Czerwińska

12:00-12:20 Julia Glibowska, Tomasz Wites, Saving the indigenous – how to preserve Huaorani culture and cope with climate change

12:20-12:40 Chao Lei, Restructuring of rural cultural spaces in tourism development: A case study of reviving the Star Worshipping Festival in Zhangbi Ancient Fortress

12:40-13:00 Joanna Hibner, Exploring visitor spatial behavior trends in protected and recreational areas – a research concept

13:00-13:20 Małgorzata Luc, Krzysztof Grabarek, Bartłomiej Ślawski,  Julia Zwolińska,  Bartosz Zarzecki,  Jerzy Walaszek, The Great Polish Map of Scotland – is this model really carthometric?

13:20-13:30 Discussion

13:30-14:30 Lunch

 

14:30-16:00 – Thematic sessions, time slot 4

 

Session 1: Urban ecosystem: Services and conflicts
Lecture room 1.21

1.4 Conflicts, participation, research. Urban ecosystems

Chairperson: Łukasz Fiedeń

14:30-14:50 - Marta Derek, Sylwia Kulczyk, Tomasz Grzyb, Edyta Woźniak, ‘Walk and talk’ about nature in nature. A qualitative approach to analyse conflicts and trade-offs in urban green spaces

14:50-15:10 Gergely Papp, Complex socio-ecological framework development of the revitalisation of post-industrial urban peripheries' intangible and tangible heritage

15:10-15:30 Hossein Talebi Khiavi, Jan Feranec, Robert Pazur, Urban land use change in Europe; linking green space connectivity and biodiversity

15:30-15:50 Ewa Bubula, Paulina  Pisarczyk, Ewa Grabska-Szwagrzyk, Dynamics of land use in small towns in Poland: A case study of Bodzentyn and Połaniec

15:50-16:00 Discussion

 

Session 3: Dynamic land use changes: opportunity for rewilding?
Lecture room 1.23

3.4 Land use and land cover: Case studies

Chairperson: Dominik Kaim

POSTERS (14:30-14:40):

Tomáš Hrdý, The Shift of the Upper Treeline in the Ďumbier Tatras on Historical Maps and Current Aerial Photographs

ORAL PRESENTATIONS:

14:40-15:00 Pavel Hronček, Bohuslava Hrončeková Gregorová, Tomáš Hrdý, River landscape in Banska Bystrica (Slovakia) at the beginning of the 18th century

15:00-15:20 Urszula Myga-Piątek, Anna Żemła-Siesicka, Bartłomiej Szypuła, Agnieszka Piechota, Method for assessing landscape changes caused by deep mining of hard coal in mining areas on the example of Jastrzębska Spółka Węglowa (Poland)

15:20-15:40 Karol Król, Tomasz Salata, Józef Hernik, Anita Kukulska-Kozieł, Katarzyna Cegielska, GeoSen: map applications with an artificial intelligence (AI) component – prototype application

15:40-16:00 Tomasz Salata, Application of machine learning algorithms and satellite imagery in identifying land cover changes

16:00-16:20 Discussion

 

Session 4: Climate change: Detection and impacts
Lecture room 1.25

4.4 Climate change impacts, adaptation and mitigation

Chairperson: Zbigniew Ustrnul

14:30-14:50 Oksana Pelyukh, Vulnerability of mountain forest ecosystem of the Ukrainian Carpathians: application of the DPSIR framework

14:50-15:10 Agnieszka Sulikowska, Ewa Grabska-Szwagrzyk, Agnieszka Wypych, Air temperature impact on springtime tree phenology in Poland based on satellite data

15:10-15:30 Patryk Kaczmarek, Paweł Churski, Katarzyna Fagiewicz, Tomasz Herodowicz, Piotr Lupa, Joanna Morawska, Andrzej Mizgajski, Co-creation for climate action - experience with implementing NBS's

15:30-16:00 Discussion

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8.05.2024, Wednesday

Location: Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Collegium Novum, 24 Gołębia St., Aula

9:00-10:00 – registration

 

10:00-12:00 – Special session: 175 years of geographical studies in Kraków

  • 175 years of the Institute of Geography and Spatial Management
  • Wincenty Pol: The poet who loved geography
  • The map of Scotland: Creative cartography yesterday and tomorrow
  • Geographical kaleidoscope: Diversity of current geographical research in the Jagiellonian University

12:00-12:30 – Jubilee toast and presentation of the 3D map of Scotland

12:30-14:00 – Closing panel session:  conclusions from thematic sessions and future perspectives of geographical research

14:00-15:00 - Lunch

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9.05.2024, Thursday

Conference trips

  1. The heritage of Lemko region in the South of Poland – an interpretative guided tour 

The Lemko region is an ethnographic area located in the south of Poland, in the heart of Low Beskids mountains. The area was historically inhabited by Lemko people and still preserved the footprints of their culture and tradition. The visit includes the interpretative guided tour to the heritage sites of Lemko region, elements of heritage interpretation workshops and lunch in the traditional guest house with local cuisine. 

Maximum number of participants: 25 persons 

 

  1. Visit in Climatological Station of the Jagiellonian University in Botanical Garden 

The Climatological Station of the Jagiellonian University was founded in 1792 and has operated since then. It is located in the former astronomical observatory in the Botanical Garden of the Jagiellonian University. The visit includes guided tour to the historical part of the station and the astronomical observatory, to the measurement site established after the Second World War and lunch in the Botanical Garden. 

Maximum number of participants: 25 persons 

 

The field trip fees can be added to the registration fee in the registration system.