EGU 2025 session: Volcanic plumes: insights into volcanic emissions and their impacts on societies, the environment and climate

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From: Giuseppe Salerno <giuseppe.salerno@xxxxxxx>


Dear colleagues,

We would like to call your attention to the session GMPV9.3  - Volcanic
plumes: insights into volcanic emissions and their impacts on societies,
the environment and climateâ?? at the annual EGU General Assembly, in Vienna,
Austria, between 27 April -2 May 2025.  Deadline abstract submission: *15
January 2025,* 13:00 CET.

Best regards and see you in Vienna,

Giuseppe Salerno, Pasquale Sellitto, Stefano Corradini, Corinna Kloss,
Thomas Aubry

Please find the full session description (
https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU25/session/54233
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU25/session/54233__;!!IKRxdwAv5BmarQ!fz4y48Cefhb7ITihS9XcOUCIi5Gvfhs-4EI1B2gveZw2JMmFM3kHOJrmm7EM31jb-eXanVFjQKAGUCwz8Odg5nm9zw$>
)

Volcanoes release tephra, gases and aerosols into the atmosphere during
both eruptive and quiescent activity. Volcanic degassing exerts a dominant
role in forcing the style and timing of volcanic eruptions. Emissions range
from silent exhalation through soils to astonishing eruptive clouds
injecting tephra, aerosols and gas into the atmosphere. Strong explosive
eruptions pose critical hazards on the ground and in the air and represent
one of the most important natural drivers of climate variability at
annual-multidecadal timescales. Persistent quiescent degassing and
low-magnitude eruptions, on the other hand, may impact on the regional
climate system. Through direct exposure and indirect effects, volcanic
emissions may destroy the natural and built environment, influence
local-to-regional air quality and seriously affect the biosphere and
environment and, in turn, livelihoods causing socio-economic challenges.
Tephra, aerosols and gas emissions are observed and monitored via a range
of in situ direct and remote sensing techniques to gain insights into both
the subterranean-surface processes and quantify the extent of their
impacts. Inverted data are then used to tune models of subsurface and
atmospheric/climatic processes as well as laboratory experiments and to
validate and interpret satellite observations. This session focuses on
state-of-the-art and interdisciplinary science concerning all aspects of
volcanic tephra, aerosols and gas emissions and their impacts on societies,
the environment and climate. We invite contributions on all aspects of
volcanic plumes science, their observation, modelling and impacts. We
welcome contributions that address hazard assessment and impacts from
volcanic degassing both in crises and at persistently degassing volcanoes.
This session is organized under the auspices of the IAVCEI Commission on
Tephra Hazard Modeling.


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