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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2022-03-31
    Description: Compound weather and climate events are combinations of climate drivers and/or hazards that contribute to societal or environmental risk. Studying compound events often requires a multidisciplinary approach combining domain knowledge of the underlying processes with, for example, statistical methods and climate model outputs. Recently, to aid the development of research on compound events, four compound event types were introduced, namely (a) preconditioned, (b) multivariate, (c) temporally compounding, and (d) spatially compounding events. However, guidelines on how to study these types of events are still lacking. Here, we consider four case studies, each associated with a specific event type and a research question, to illustrate how the key elements of compound events (e.g., analytical tools and relevant physical effects) can be identified. These case studies show that (a) impacts on crops from hot and dry summers can be exacerbated by preconditioning effects of dry and bright springs. (b) Assessing compound coastal flooding in Perth (Australia) requires considering the dynamics of a non‐stationary multivariate process. For instance, future mean sea‐level rise will lead to the emergence of concurrent coastal and fluvial extremes, enhancing compound flooding risk. (c) In Portugal, deep‐landslides are often caused by temporal clusters of moderate precipitation events. Finally, (d) crop yield failures in France and Germany are strongly correlated, threatening European food security through spatially compounding effects. These analyses allow for identifying general recommendations for studying compound events. Overall, our insights can serve as a blueprint for compound event analysis across disciplines and sectors.
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Many societal and environmental impacts from events such as droughts and storms arise from a combination of weather and climate factors referred to as a compound event. Considering the complex nature of these high‐impact events is crucial for an accurate assessment of climate‐related risk, for example to develop adaptation and emergency preparedness strategies. However, compound event research has emerged only recently, therefore our ability to analyze these events is still limited. In practice, studying compound events is a challenging task, which often requires interaction between experts across multiple disciplines. Recently, compound events were divided into four types to aid the framing of research on this topic, but guidelines on how to study these four types are missing. Here, we take a pragmatic approach and—focusing on case studies of different compound event types—illustrate how to address specific research questions that could be of interest to users. The results allow identifying recommendations for compound event analyses. Furthermore, through the case studies, we highlight the relevance that compounding effects have for the occurrence of landslides, flooding, vegetation impacts, and crop failures. The guidelines emerged from this work will assist the development of compound event analysis across disciplines and sectors.
    Description: Key Points: Using case studies representative of four main compound event types we show how compound event‐related research questions can be tackled. We present user‐friendly guidelines for compound event analysis applicable to different compound event types. We demonstrate that compound events cause vegetation impacts, coastal flooding, landslides, and continental‐scale crop yield failures.
    Description: European COST action DAMOCLES
    Description: NERC
    Description: Swiss National Science Foundation
    Description: Helmholtz Initiative and Networking Fund
    Description: Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)
    Description: Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia
    Description: Scientific Employment Stimulus 2017
    Description: Italian Ministry of University and Research
    Description: European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
    Description: AXA Research Fund for support
    Description: Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology
    Keywords: ddc:551.6
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-01-04
    Description: Whakaari/White Island is a partially submerged, offshore andesite island volcano, located at the northern end of the Taupō Volcanic Zone. Since the late 1960s, volcanic activity has alternated between quiescence, unrest, and eruption on short timescales. For this review we compiled extensive observational records, examined the rich scientific literature, and use newly acquired data, to understand the broad volcanic history and system dynamics. Based on recent bathymetry data, we propose a distinction exists between the Whakaari edifice and Te Paepae o Aotea/Volkner Rocks, which were previously considered to be part of the same edifice. Geochemical analyses of scoria samples from the island have been used to build a magma system model where dominantly andesitic-dacitic magma is periodically intruded by basalt. More dynamic processes are recorded in the hydrothermal system, where the location and activity of fumarolic features have been ephemeral and the crater lake has varied in scale over short time intervals. Eruptions of the dominantly andesitic magma have historically been small and range from phreatomagmatic through to magmatic, largely depositing ash and scoria to a restricted distance that is confined to the main crater floor. Phreatic eruptions are the most common eruption style, based on recently observed and monitored activity.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2012-04-01
    Description: Zoned phenocrysts in volcanic rocks potentially provide an archive of magmatic processes. As a crystal grows and comes into contact with different melt batches, the chemical and textural signature of this journey is recorded within its crystal lattice. The timescale of some magmatic processes can be investigated through the relaxation of chemical gradients across crystal growth zones through the application of diffusion modeling techniques. One of the current limitations to diffusion modeling is the spatial and analytical resolution of the chemical profile that conventional techniques such as electron probe microanalyzer (EPMA), dynamic secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), and laser ablation-inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICPMS) can achieve. Here, for the first time, we present time-of-flight (TOF) SIMS (TOF-SIMS) data for zoning of orthopyroxene crystals from the May 1982 eruption of Mount St. Helens volcano, U.S.A., and cross-calibrate these data between backscattered electron images and EPMA. TOF-SIMS has the advantage of being able to achieve micrometer to nanoscale spatial resolution of major elements as well as analyses of light elements, such as Li, and trace and minor elements (Na, K, and Ni) at concentrations that cannot be achieved by EPMA, provided that convolution (overlap) effects and polyatomic mass inferences are carefully considered. With TOF-SIMS analyses we identified zoning of Li on a spatial scale (ca. 5–10 µm) that would be inaccessible to most other conventional analytical techniques. Preliminary results indicate that Li, a fast-diffusing element, may be introduced to the crystals in the minutes, hours, or days prior to eruption and may provide insights into pre-eruptive magmatic processes. Thus, TOF-SIMS has the potential to be a powerful tool for obtaining minor and trace element profiles across compositional interfaces within crystals at high-spatial resolution.
    Print ISSN: 0003-004X
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-3027
    Topics: Geosciences
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