Dear Colleagues,
With the abstract deadline fast approaching please accept this last gentle reminder about GM 2.2 the ‘Digital Landscapes’ session at EGU2012 (Vienna, 22-27 April 2012). Following a successful session last year, we look forward to seeing you at another dynamic, diverse and interesting session. Related to his work recently published in Nature, Prof. Tony Watts will speak about "Repeat swath bathymetry surveys and the rates of growth and collapse of active submarine volcanoes" highlighting how repeat surveys can shed light on active geological processes.
how the rapidly changing volcanoes of the Pacific
> GM 2.2 Digital Landscapes: Quantitative Interrogation and Use to Examine Geomorphic Processes
This inter-disciplinary session focuses on exciting quantitative uses of digital landscapes (DEM, DTM, DSM or point-cloud), especially when linked to sub-surface data, to understand how the Earth’s surface is shaped. Global (e.g. ASTER) to high-resolution (e.g. laser scanning, photogrammetry) data sets are welcomed as we believe developments will come through cross-fertilization of best practice and interesting method of analysis. Possibilities (e.g. repeat surveys, real-time), problems (e.g. awkward case studies), solutions and interesting geomorphic uses from neo-tectonics to volcano formation are encouraged.
A full description of the session can be found at
http://meetingorganizer.copernicus.org/EGU2012/session/9760
Deadline for Receipt of Abstracts: 17 January 2012
All the best
John, Paola, Susan, Paolo and David
(conveners)
p.s – Full session description below
This inter-disciplinary technical session will highlight developments driving innovation in the exciting uses of digital landscapes (DEM, DTM, or DSM) of the Earth, seafloor or planetary terrains. It aims to bring together ‘users’ analysing digital landscapes to exhibit the best methods and computational techniques, cross-fertilize best practice, and illustrate what can be achieved and what challenges remain. Possibilities (e.g. innovations), problems (e.g. awkward case studies), solutions and interesting geomorphic uses are encouraged.
We believe that objective, robust and reproducible quantitative methods underpin our ability to unlock the potential wealth of new insights into geomorphic processes recorded in DEMs.
Much interest is expected in high-resolution DEMs, but any data source (e.g. laser scanning, SAR, photogrammetry, satellite-derived) is welcome. Fusion between topographic data and other measurements is in scope.
In geomorphic processes we include both natural processes and those creating a human fingerprint in the landscape. Features identified or parameterised could include volcanoes, craters, gullies, fault scarps, drumlins, or those reflecting anthropogenic disturbances such as deforestation, new urban areas, or land-use change. Natural processes constrained could range from mass-wasting to volcano formation, and from flooding to sedimentary deposition.
We encourage early stage researchers to present their studies
-------------------------
Dr John Hillier
Lecturer - Physical Geography
Loughborough University
01509 223727
|