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Kathryn Moore gained degree qualifications in geology (BSc), experimental petrology (PhD) and archaeology (Dip) from the University of Edinburgh, University of Bristol and National University of Ireland, Galway. She led the Magmatic Studies Group at the National University of Ireland, Galway from 1999 and moved to the Camborne School of Mines in 2012, as lecturer in Critical and Green Technology Metals. She participates in and supervises research relating to alkaline rocks, carbonatites, ore deposits (particularly critical metals), and small-scale mining. Dana Finch has worked as a project manager on several European funded research projects since 2006, at Imperial College and King's College, London, before moving to the University of Exeter to become the project manager of the IMP@CT Project. She is also a practising artist, a graduate from Dartington College of Arts, and exhibits regularly in the UK. She initiated and co-curated the Of Earth - For Earth exhibition and is a co-founder of Deep Earth Synergies, an arts hub dedicated to bringing artists and mining professionals together to examine novel solutions to age-old problems. Bridget Storrie is a PhD candidate at the Institute of Global Prosperity at UCL, supervised by Professor Dame Henrietta Moore. Her research focus is the relationship between natural resources, conflict and peace. She has an MA in Russian (St Andrews University), a Masters in Peacebuilding and Reconciliation (Distinction) from Winchester University and is a trained mediator (Justice Institute of British Columbia). Bridget worked as a foreign news producer for ITN in Moscow in the early 1990s.
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