Springer recently published the book:
Ecology of meromictic Lakes (Gulati et al.), in which CVL Steering Committee member Bertram Boehrer was involved as a pluri-author.
For more information and to buy the book, please click the book cover below.
Springer recently published the book:
Ecology of meromictic Lakes (Gulati et al.), in which CVL Steering Committee member Bertram Boehrer was involved as a pluri-author.
For more information and to buy the book, please click the book cover below.
Conveners:
Audray Delcamp, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; delcampa@tcd.ie
Jessica Ball, USGS; jlball@usgs.gov
Engielle Mae Paguican-Fabbro, Vrije Universiteit Brussel; engiellepaguican@gmail.com
Benjamin van Wyk de Vries, Laboratoire Magmas et Volcans; B.vanwyk@opgc.fr
Dmitri Rouwet, Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia, Sezione di Bologna, Italy; dmitri.rouwet@ingv.it
Agnes Mazot, GNS-Wairakei, New Zealand; a.mazot@gns.cri.nz
Corentin Caudron, University of Cambridge, UK; corentin.caudron@gmail.com
Johan C. Varekamp, Wesleyan University, USA; jvarekamp@wesleyan.edu
Haruhisa Nakamichi, Sakurajima Volcano Research Center, Disaster Prevention Research Institute, Kyoto University, Japan; nakamiti@svo.dpri.kyoto-u.ac.jp
Volcanoes store large amounts of water in their porous layers, cracks, and cavities, whereas crater lakes can be subaerial exposures of underlying hydrothermal systems or direct receptacles of volcanic gases. “Wet volcanoes” can have phreatic and magmatic eruptions, and variations in composition and temperature of the aqueous fluids, and the level of seismicity can be used to monitor such activities. Unrest at wet volcanoes often culminates into phreatic eruptions, which are generally hard to predict. The “hydrocells” themselves also pose dangers, be it limnic eruptions or rupturing of the system with toxic floods. Similarly, ground water can play a major role during collapse by changing the volcano’s rheology. Modelling the hydrogeological system of volcanic aquifers is difficult since the environment is constantly changing and geophysical data and boreholes are limited.
We invite contributions that involve studies on wet volcanoes and active crater lake systems, using water and gas chemistry or geophysical surveys, hydrogeology with focus on water storage, migration, drainage, evolution with time, and contributions on the influence of water before and during landslides. In addition, work on numerical, conceptual and analogue modeling of fluid flow as well as eruption mechanisms of these volcanoes are welcome.
Deadline for abstract submissions is March 17, 2017. Click here to start your submission.
Portland, Oregon. The Hawthorne Bridge over Willamette River (picture D. Rouwet, 2010) .
Bruce W. Christenson (Senior Researcher at GNS, Lower Hutt, New Zealand) is named CVL Secretary since December 2016, after New Zealand was elected as the exciting site of the next CVL10 Workshop, March 2019. Bruce is the most active among “lake pioneers” and his work and open view on Ruapehu, Tongariro, White Island, Raoul, and other lakes on Earth, is a strong fundament for many of us. Thank you, Bruce, for taking on this important task for CVL.
Volcanologist | Geophysicist | Senior Lecturer | et al...
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C'è un solo tipo di successo: quello di fare della propria vita ciò che si desidera. (Henry David Thoreau)