Haeberli | Snow and Ice-Related Hazards, Risks, and Disasters | Buch | 978-0-12-817129-5 | sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 784 Seiten, Format (B × H): 191 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 1560 g

Haeberli

Snow and Ice-Related Hazards, Risks, and Disasters


2. Auflage 2021
ISBN: 978-0-12-817129-5
Verlag: William Andrew Publishing

Buch, Englisch, 784 Seiten, Format (B × H): 191 mm x 235 mm, Gewicht: 1560 g

ISBN: 978-0-12-817129-5
Verlag: William Andrew Publishing


Snow and Ice-Related Hazards, Risks, and Disasters, Second Edition, provides you with the latest scientific developments in sea level rise, permafrost degradation, rock/ice avalanches, glacier surges, glacial lake outburst floods, ice shelf collapses, climate change implications, causality, impacts, preparedness and mitigation. The book takes a geo-scientific approach to the topic while also covering current thinking about directly related social scientific issues that can affect ecosystems and global economies. Special emphasis is placed on the rapidly progressing effects from global warming on the cryosphere, perspectives for the future and latest scientific advances, and technological developments.
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Zielgruppe


<p>Geoscientists, including glaciologists, oceanographers, climatologists, environmental scientists, geologists, geophysicists geomorphologists, atmospheric scientists, and seismologists</p>

Weitere Infos & Material


1. Snow and Ice-Related Hazards, Risks, and Disasters: A General Framework 2. Physical, Thermal, and Mechanical Properties of Snow, Ice, and Permafrost 3. Snow and Ice in the Climate System 4. Snow and Ice in the Hydrosphere 5. Snow, Ice, and the Biosphere 6. Ice and Snow as Land-Forming Agents 7. Mountains, Lowlands, and Coasts: the Physiography of Cold Landscapes 8. Integrated Approaches to Adaptation and Disaster Risk Reduction in Dynamic Socio-cryospheric Systems 9. Integrative Risk Management: The Example of Snow Avalanches 10. Permafrost Degradation 11. Radioactive Waste Under Conditions of Future Ice Ages 12. Snow Avalanches 13. Glacier Surges 14. Glacier-Related Outburst Floods 15. Ice Loss and Slope Stability in High-Mountain Regions 16. Catastrophic Mass Flows in the Mountain Glacial Environment 17. Hazards at Ice-Clad Volcanoes: Phenomena, Processes, and Examples From Mexico, Colombia, Ecuador, and Chile 18. Floating Ice and Ice Pressure Challenge to Ships 19. Retreat Instability of Tidewater Glaciers and Marine Ice Sheets 20. Ice Sheets, Glaciers, and Sea Level


Haeberli, Wilfried
Wilfried Haeberli is professor emeritus at the Geography Department, University of Zurich, Switzerland. His research focuses on high mountains, impacts from climate change, glacier and permafrost monitoring, natural hazards and ice-age paleoglaciology. He obtained his PhD in Geography at the University of Basel (1974) and his habilitation in glaciology and geomorphology at ETH Zurich (1985). From 1989 to 1995 he led the Glaciology Section at the Laboratory of Hydraulics, Hydrology and Glaciology of ETH Zurich, from 1995 to 2013 he was full professor of Physical Geography at the University of Zurich, from 1986 to 2010 he was the first director of the World Glacier Monitoring Service (WGMS) of IACS/ICSU, UNEP, UNESCO and WMO and from1998 - 2003 he served as a vice president of the International Permafrost Association (IPA). As a member of the Terrestrial Observation Panel for Climate (TOP-C) from 1996 to 2009 he was responsible for the integration of cryosphere components as Essential Climate Variables into the terrestrial part (Global Terrestrial Observing System; GTOS) of the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS). He has been actively involved in various functions with the second to the fifth IPCC assessments and works as an expert and consultant concerning high-mountain hazards and climate-change impacts in various countries of South America, Asia and Europe

Shroder, John F.
Dr. John (Jack) F. Shroder received his bachelor's degree in geology from Union College in 1961; his masters in geology from the University of Massachusetts - Amherst in 1963, and his Ph.D. in geology at the University of Utah in 1967. He has been actively pursuing research on landforms and natural resources in the high mountain environments of the Rocky Mountains, the Afghanistan Hindu Kush, and the Karakoram Himalaya of Pakistan for over a half century. His teaching specialties have been primarily geomorphology, but also physical and historical geology and several other courses at the University of Nebraska at Omaha where he was the founding professor of the Geology major. While there he was instrumental in founding the Center for Afghanistan Studies in 1972, and he was the lead geologist for the Bethsaida Archaeological Project in Israel in the 1990s. He taught geology as an NSF-, USAID, and Fulbright-sponsored professor at Kabul University in 1977-78, as well as a Fulbright award to Peshawar University in 1983-84. He has some 63 written or edited books to his credit and more than 200 professional papers, with emphases on landslides, glaciers, flooding, and mineral resources in Afghanistan. He is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America and the American Association for the Advancement of Science and has received Distinguished Career awards from both the Mountain and the Geomorphology Specialty Groups of the Association of American Geographers. In the recent decade as an Emeritus Professor, he served as a Trustee of the Geological Society of America Foundation where he set up a research scholarship, the Shroder Mass Movement award for masters and doctoral candidates. For the past two decades, he has been the Editor-in-Chief for the Developments in Earth Surface Processes book series of Elsevier Publishing, as well as the 10-volumes of the Treatise on Geomorphology, and the Hazards, Risks, and Disasters book series, both in second editions. Recently, Dr. Shroder was ranked among the top 2 percent of researchers worldwide by the October study conducted by Stanford University.


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