EGU2014. Volcano monitoring with instrument networks: novel techniques, observations and interpretations
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Dear Colleagues,
Hope you had a good start into the New Year; We would like to encourage you to contribute with a presentation to the session GMPV37 on ‘Volcano monitoring with instrument networks: novel techniques, observations and interpretations’ at the EGU General Assembly in Vienna, Austria, 27 April - 2 May 2014.
Abstract submission deadline: 16 January 2014 (http://www.egu2014.eu/abstract_management/how_to_submit_an_abstract.html)
We look forward to meet you in Vienna.
Jurgen Neuberg, Alessandro Bonaccorso and Giuseppe Salerno
GMPV37: Volcano monitoring with instrument networks: novel techniques, observations and interpretations (http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2014/session/14276) |
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Over the past few years, major technological advances allowed to significantly increase both the spatial coverage and frequency bandwidth of geochemical and geophysical observations at active volcanoes. Establishment of high-rate GPS networks, continuous gravity meters, dense arrays of broad-band seismometers, and networks of instruments for the quantitative measurement of volcanic gas emissions now permits an unprecedented, multi-parameter vision of the surface manifestations of mass transport beneath volcanoes. Accompanying these progresses are new models and processing techniques leading to innovative paradigms for the interpretation and inversion of observational data. Within this context, this session aims at bringing together a multidisciplinary audience to discuss about the most recent innovations in monitoring approaches and to present observations, methods and models that increase our understanding of volcanic processes.
We
welcome contribution related to (1) New instruments and techniques for the
measurement of geophysical and geochemical parameters, from in-situ methods to
ground-, air- and space-based remote sensing techniques; (2) Reports of
significant case histories, documenting the relationships between the measured
parameters and the evolving volcanic processes; (3) New modelling frameworks for
the interpretation of the observed data, and their significance in terms of
eruption forecasting.
The session will provide an opportunity to discuss
volcanic activity from a monitoring perspective on a wide range of volcanoes. We
therefore encourage submission of papers that are easily understandable to a
broad, multi-disciplinary audience.
Volcano Listserv is a collaborative venture among Arizona State University (ASU), Portland State University (PSU), the Global Volcanism Program (GVP) of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History, and the International Association for Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI).
ASU - http://www.asu.edu/ PSU - http://pdx.edu/ GVP - http://www.volcano.si.edu/ IAVCEI - http://www.iavcei.org/
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