The Society of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (SETAC) invites you to join us at the SETAC North America 30th Annual Meeting to be held 19-23 November 2009 at the New Orleans Hilton Riverside, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA. This year`s theme is Human-Environment Interactions: Understanding Change in Dynamic Systems.

Why Attend the SETAC North America 30th Annual Meeting?
Who wouldn’t want to attend this milestone anniversary of SETAC meetings in New Orleans, the most unique and multicultural of all U.S. cities?
Unlike any other city in the U.S., New Orleans offers a nearly 300-year history shaped by French, Spanish, African, Irish, Italian, German, Greek, and Haitian influences. Music, art, cuisine, festivals, riverboats, shopping, museums, cemeteries, the French Quarter, Jackson Square, the Garden District, the Arts District, the French Market…the list of entertaining and educational options is endless.
From the Cabildo, site of the Louisiana Purchase transfer in 1803, to the Children’s Museum, the National World War II Museum, the Old U.S. Mint, and the Preservation Research Center, you’ll never run out of museums to wander. The Warehouse-turned-Arts District and Royal Street offer galleries and artists galore, from traditional to primitive, from classical to avant-garde.
If you hunger for another of the Big Easy’s art forms, you’ll find culinary delights galore. Enjoy a beignet and café au lait from the renowned Café du Monde, then walk up the street for an authentic po’ boy; savor some crawfish étouffée or authentic gumbo, often called the greatest of Louisiana’s contributions to American cuisine; visit Central Grocery, the originator of the muffuletta; have some andouille from the charter Emeril’s Restaurant, just blocks from the Hilton Riverside—morning, noon, and night, the city entices you to taste just one more treat (and to quench your thirst).
But perhaps the most beloved art form born of New Orleans is Jazz. From Jelly Roll Morton to the Marsalis family, from Louis Armstrong to Harry Connick, Jr., the city nurtures the cool and the spicy in music. Whether you enjoy a street performer in Jackson Square or hit up a concert in the House of Blues, New Orleans has music to suit all tastes.
But if New Orleans’ charms alone aren’t enough to get you rollin’ down the Mighty Mississippi toward its favorite port, what SETAC offers there will: the camaraderie of 2000 of your fellow scientists, the smorgasbord of 1500 presentations, the panoply of 100 exhibits, and the dozens of awards, social events, and networking opportunities.

Guidelines for Submission of Abstracts
Presenter Guidelines
Presenters in all Annual Meeting sessions are required to use digital projection of a PowerPoint presentation. PowerPoint presentations should be prepared for use with PowerPoint 2007 in a PC compatible format. If you have developed your presentation with an earlier version of PowerPoint, or have developed it on a Macintosh platform, it SHOULD project properly, but we encourage you to preview it on a PC with PowerPoint 2007 BEFORE arriving at the meeting to ensure that it will project properly.
The presentation of a slide talk or computer presentation is quite different from the presentation of the same information in a journal article. Keep in mind that in a slide presentation, you have only 20 minutes including Q&A.
- Prepare your slide to communicate ideas, not details. If attendees want details, let them ask you in the Q&A period.
- A table in a published article is much too detailed for a slide presentation. Take the time to think through what conclusion you want to present from the table and present the least amount of material you can to communicate that idea. A graph or photograph may better communicate your data.
- A slide presentation should include a title slide, a slide stating the question or hypothesis to be addressed, and a slide describing the overall approach you used to address the question. A 'methods' slide should be included but should never include the details of the method unless the purpose of the talk is to describe the method. The next several slides should present the results obtained, and a final slide should give the conclusions of the study.
- Review your presentation on a different machine from which it was originally prepared to ensure the backgrounds, transitions, video clips, graphics, and linked images appear properly.
Instructions for Giving a Platform Presentation:
Presenters in all Annual Meeting sessions are required to use digital projection of a PowerPoint presentation.
- Arrive at least 30 minutes prior to the beginning of your session and introduce yourself to the chairperson. Provide appropriate information to him/her for your introduction. Uploaded presentations will be downloaded on the computer for you before the session starts.
- Upload your presentation by 4:00PM the day before your Session. Be sure to check the Presentation Services Desk for the location of the presentation preview area. One of the most effective contributions to a presentation is well-prepared slides.
- The electronic projection equipment available in each room will include a P4 PC (2.4GHz) laptop equipped with Windows XP and PowerPoint 2007. Please bring a backup of your Power Point presentation to the meeting on a USB Memory Device. It is highly recommended if you are a Macintosh user to test your presentation on a PC to verify it converts to WINDOWS format accurately. There will NOT be any MAC equipment available.
- Schedule. No scheduling change can be made. You have been allotted a total of 20 minutes, including discussion for your presentation. The chairperson has been instructed to require all speakers to adhere to this limit: fifteen minutes for the presentation, five minutes for discussion.
- Should circumstances prevent you from making your presentation, you must arrange for a substitute to present your paper and you must notify your session chairperson as well as SETAC Headquarters.


NEWS & PRESS RELEASES
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Aug. 11, 2009