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CoV9. S3.9 New developments and challenges in volcano monitoring
From: "maartenjdemoor ." <maartenjdemoor@xxxxxxxxx>CoV9. S3.9 New developments and challenges in volcano monitoring
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Dear Colleagues,
We invite you to submit an abstract to the following session at CoV9 in Puerto Varas, Chile:
S3.9 New developments and challenges in volcano monitoring
The past few decades have seen development of new methods to detect volcanic unrest and eruptive activity. These include the use of UV cameras, multiple gas analyzers, weather radar, volcanic lightning, infrasound, satellites, and unmanned aerial vehicles, among others. With new technologies come new challenges in maintaining networks, developing consistent workflows, interpreting complex volcanic processes, and communicating relevant information with stakeholders and decision-makers.
We invite you to submit an abstract to the following session at CoV9 in Puerto Varas, Chile:
S3.9 New developments and challenges in volcano monitoring
The past few decades have seen development of new methods to detect volcanic unrest and eruptive activity. These include the use of UV cameras, multiple gas analyzers, weather radar, volcanic lightning, infrasound, satellites, and unmanned aerial vehicles, among others. With new technologies come new challenges in maintaining networks, developing consistent workflows, interpreting complex volcanic processes, and communicating relevant information with stakeholders and decision-makers.
This
session focuses on how emerging techniques can be integrated
with established monitoring tools (including seismicity, deformation,
fluid sampling, and analysis of tephra) to detect and interpret changes
at restless volcanoes. We invite contributions from any aspect of in situ, ground-based or remote monitoring techniques that improve our understanding of hazards related to:
- Changes in magma systems leading to eruption or quiescence,
- Interactions between magmatic and hydrothermal systems, producing explosive eruptions
- Shifts in eruption style that influence ash dispersal, pyroclastic density currents, and lahars
- Models for eruptive behavior, and
- Analysis of uncertainty from monitoring observations
The abstract submission deadline is 15 July 2016 and the meeting will be held from 20–25 November 2016.
Website: http://www.citiesonvolcanoes9.com/en
Program: http://www.citiesonvolcanoes9.com/fileadmin/documentos/2CIRCULAR_COV9_ENG_20160505.pdf
We look forward to seeing you in Chile.
Website: http://www.citiesonvolcanoes9.com/en
Program: http://www.citiesonvolcanoes9.com/fileadmin/documentos/2CIRCULAR_COV9_ENG_20160505.pdf
We look forward to seeing you in Chile.
Kind Regards,
Alexa Van Eaton
Maarten de Moor
OVSICORI-UNA, Costa Rica
OVSICORI-UNA, Costa Rica
Alexa Van Eaton
USGS Cascades Volcano Observatory
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).
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