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  • 2020-2024  (8)
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  • 1
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    In:  Abstracts
    Publication Date: 2023-03-17
    Description: As environmental seismology has been rapidly growing and developing over the past years, one of the fields that is benefitting from this seismic revolution is the study of geomorphic processes. Seismic methods provide a unique and powerful tool for the observation of geomorphic activity, allowing us to address questions that were not possible (or extremely difficult) to tackle with other techniques. From the perspective of geomorphologists, we give an overview of three general areas in which seismic techniques have been or have the potential to enable significant advances in our understanding of geomorphic processes: (1) the occurrence, timing, and triggering of geomorphic events, (2) the dynamics of geomorphic processes, (3) fluvial bedload transport, and we look towards future developments in integrative geomorphic system monitoring. In order to keep the seismic advances coming, integration between geomorphologists and seismologists is key, as the community continues to identify key geomorphic questions that seismology can help answer and in parallel develops the theory, analytical techniques, and measurement strategies needed for application to new geomorphic questions.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-01-31
    Description: Debris flows threaten communities in mountain regions worldwide. Combining modern photogrammetric processing with autonomous unoccupied aerial vehicle (UAV) flights at sub-weekly intervals allows mapping of sediment dynamics in a debris flow catchment. This provides important information for sediment disposition that pre-conditions the catchment for debris flow occurrence. At the Illgraben debris flow catchment in Switzerland, our autonomous UAV launched nearly 50 times in the snow-free periods in 2019–2021 with typical flight intervals of 2–4 d, producing 350–400 images every flight. The observed terrain changes resulting from debris flows exhibit preferred locations of erosion and deposition, including memory effects as previously deposited material is preferentially removed during subsequent debris flows. Such data are critical for the validation of geomorphological process models. Given the remote terrain, the mapped short-term erosion and deposition structures are difficult to obtain with conventional measurements. The proposed method thus fills an observational gap, which ground-based monitoring and satellite-based remote sensing cannot fill as a result of limited access, reaction time, spatial resolution, or involved costs.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2023-07-11
    Description: Shallow earthquakes frequently disturb the hydrological and mechanical state of the subsurface, with consequences for hazard and water management. Transient post-seismic hydrological behaviour has been widely reported, suggesting that the recovery of material properties (relaxation) following ground shaking may impact groundwater fluctuations. However, the monitoring of seismic velocity variations associated with earthquake damage and hydrological variations are often done assuming that both effects are independent. In a field site prone to highly variable hydrological conditions, we disentangle the different forcing of the relative seismic velocity variations δv retrieved from a small dense seismic array in Nepal in the aftermath of the 2015 Mw 7.8 Gorkha earthquake. We successfully model transient damage effects by introducing a universal relaxation function that contains a unique maximum relaxation timescale for the main shock and the aftershocks, independent of the ground shaking levels. Next, we remove the modeled velocity from the raw data and test whether the corresponding residuals agree with a background hydrological behaviour we inferred from a previously calibrated groundwater model. The fitting of the δv data with this model is improved when we introduce transient hydrological properties in the phase immediately following the main shock. This transient behaviour, interpreted as an enhanced permeability in the shallow subsurface, lasts for ∼ 6 months and is shorter than the damage relaxation ( ∼ 1 year). Thus, we demonstrate the capability of seismic interferometry to deconvolve transient hydrological properties after earthquakes from non-linear mechanical recovery.
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-10-13
    Description: The eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau has given rise to much debate about mechanisms of plateau uplift and evolution and, in particular, the role of the lower crust in crustal thickening. Knowledge of the middle to lower crust conditions is critical for evaluating various models of crustal deformation, but data on crustal evolution through time are lacking. Here, we turn to the Gongga Shan granite, an intrusion along the Xianshuihe fault in easternmost Tibet that directly records local Cenozoic crustal conditions. Wepresent 124 U-Pb samples from the Gongga Shan granite (GSG) that prove that the crust has been stepwise producing partial melt from 56 Ma to 4 Ma. According to the age distribution, the GSG can be separated into four major groups with ages of 4–10 Ma, 12–20 Ma, 25–40 Ma, and 43–56 Ma. Combining the timing information with geophysics and lowtemperature thermochronology data, we suggest that events younger than 10 Ma may indicate the onset of recent crustal channel flow in the middle to lower crust. In contrast, the youngest 4 Ma ages indicate the ongoing partial melting of the middle crust. The 12–20 Ma events could be related to an earlier stage of crustal channel flow, consistent with the regional large-scale crustal channel flow in central Tibet.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 5
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    In:  XXVIII General Assembly of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG)
    Publication Date: 2023-12-11
    Description: Some of the most destructive mountain cryosphere hazards are those that generate far-traveled flows, most notably glacial lake outburst floods (GLOFs), but also mass wasting or glacial collapse triggered flows. These events can travel 10s to 100s of kilometers downstream through the fluvial network, and the processes that take place during this propagation may play a significant role in the magnitude and type of impact that such events have on both downstream communities and the fluvial system. While there has been substantial progress in our understanding of the past occurrence, potential sources and triggers, and initial stages of such events, particularly GLOFs, there are still a number of key open questions about their subsequent behavior. Understanding the interaction between propagating flows and the water, sediment, and channel properties they encounter as they propagate downstream is critical for the accurate estimation of the hazard potential of possible flow sources. These questions are highlighted by the complexity of several recent large events in the Himalaya, including the 2021 Chamoli event, the 2021 Melamchi flood, and the 2016 Bhote Koshi GLOF. Using new techniques such as environmental seismology, combined with advances in remote sensing and observer documentation, we can make progress towards understanding the evolution of such events as they propagate downstream.
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2024-01-15
    Description: Tectonics exerts a strong control over the morphology of Earth's surface that is apparent in active mountain belts. In lowland areas, subtle processes like lithospheric flexure and isostatic rebound can impact Earth surface dynamics, hydrologic connectivity, and topography, suggesting that geomorphic and hydrologic analyses can shed light on underlying lithospheric properties. Here we examine the effect of lithospheric flexure on the geomorphology, hydrology, and river water chemistry of the Rio Bermejo fluvial system in the east Andean foreland basin of northern Argentina. Results show that proximal to the mountain front, foredeep basin subsidence causes sedimentation along a braided channel belt that is superelevated relative to the surrounding flood basin. During floods, water flows from the superelevated channel into the groundwater reservoir, causing a net loss of discharge with distance downstream. Further downstream, forebulge uplift forces channel narrowing, high lateral migration rates, and incision up to 13 m into older river deposits. This incision locally allows groundwater flow into the river, causing a ∼20% increase in river solute load. Groundwater emerges from the forebulge into the backbulge, predominantly as spring-fed channels. Here, channel migration rates decrease, suggesting a switch from net uplift to subsidence that reduces the depth to the groundwater table. This analysis shows that subtle lithospheric flexure can have significant effects on river channel morphology that determine hydrologic flow paths, and ultimately influence geochemical and ecological patterns. We suggest that these effects may elucidate lithospheric properties that are otherwise inferred from bulk geophysical observations.
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-01-24
    Description: This dataset contain stable isotope values for water samples collected ~weekly from the Rio Bermejo at the Lavalle bridge (-25.6513, -60.1277) from March 2016 to February 2018. Water samples were filtered to 0.2 micron using a custom filtration device. We measured d2H and d18O on a Picarro L-2140i Cavity Ring-Down Spectrometer at the GFZ Potsdam. Measurements were made in duplicate, normalized to the Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water (VSMOW), and analytical uncertainty is reported as one standard deviation from the mean. River discharge was measured at the El Colorado gauging station, which is ~100 km down slope from the sampling location.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2024-01-24
    Description: Water samples were filtered to 0.2 micron prior to measurement. Samples for cation analysis were acidified in the field to pH 〈 2 using 6N HNO3. Cation concentrations were measured with a Varian 720 inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometer (ICP-OES) at the GFZ Helmholtz Laboratory for the Geochemistry of the Earth Surface (HELGES), using SLRS-5 (Saint-Laurent River Surface, National Research Council - Conseil National de Recherches Canada) and USGS M212 and USGS T187 as external standards. We corrected for instrument drift by measuring an internal standard (GFZ-RW1) every 10 samples and we determined measurement uncertainty using calibration curve uncertainty. Anion concentrations were measured with a Dionex ICS1100 Ion Chromatograph, using USGS standards M206 and M212 as external standards for quality control, with uncertainty determined from triplicate analysis. We corrected cation concentrations for cyclic salt inputs following Bickle et al. (2005, doi:10.1016/j.gca.2004.11.019).
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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