Reprint

Volcanic Processes Monitoring and Hazard Assessment Using Integration of Remote Sensing and Ground-Based Techniques

Edited by
September 2022
322 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5119-7 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-5120-3 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Volcanic Processes Monitoring and Hazard Assessment Using Integration of Remote Sensing and Ground-Based Techniques that was published in

Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

The monitoring of active volcanoes is a complex task based on multidisciplinary and integrated analyses that use ground, drones and satellite monitoring devices. Over time, and with the development of new technologies and increasing frequency of acquisition, the use of remote sensing to accomplish this important task has grown enormously. This is especially so with the use of drones and satellites for classifying eruptive events and detecting the opening of new vents, the spreading of lava flows on the surface or ash plumes in the atmosphere, the fallout of tephra on the ground, the intrusion of new magma within the volcano edifice, and the deformation preceding impending eruptions, and many other factors. The main challenge in using remote sensing techniques is to develop automated and reliable systems that may assist the decision maker in volcano monitoring, hazard assessment and risk reduction. The integration with ground-based techniques represents a valuable additional aspect that makes the proposed methods more robust and reinforces the results obtained. This collection of papers is focused on several active volcanoes, such as Stromboli, Etna, and Volcano in Italy; the Long Valley caldera and Kilauea volcano in the USA; and Cotopaxi in Ecuador.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Stromboli volcano; effusive activity; satellite thermal imagery; ground-based thermal imagery; cinder cone instability; pyroclastic density currents; Etna volcano; lava fountain; paroxysmal explosive eruptions; ash plume height; Landsat 8 satellite images; mass discharge rate time-series; Stromboli volcano; paroxysmal explosions; major explosive events; ground and remote sensing monitoring; classification of mild Strombolian events; lava delta; slope failure; repeated bathymetric surveys; digital elevation models; LiDAR; PLÉIADES; morphological monitoring; tephra; remote sensing; plume height; mass eruption rate; total erupted mass; total grain-size distribution; Etna volcano; paroxysmal explosive and effusive episodes; ash plume; remote sensing; volcano monitoring; volcanic hazard; numerical modeling; Long Valley Caldera; deformation and gravity joint inversion; topography correction; heterogenous crust; FEM; source parameters; intrusion density; Cotopaxi volcano; 1877 eruption; primary lahars; drone-imagery; geological mapping; lahar hazard assessment; integrated DInSAR and GNSS time series; geodetic dataset; volcanic deformation; early warning applications; natural hazards; SO2 flux; CO2 flux; heat flux; Vulcano Island; geochemical crisis; extensive parameters; eruption precursors; neural networks; self-organizing map; seismo-acoustic signals; Stromboli volcano; volcano monitoring; ground-based visible and thermal imagery; ground deformation; volcano deformation; automated detection; remote sensing; lava fountains; Etna volcano; n/a