TY - CONF
T1 - On the use of UAVs at active volcanoes:
T2 - a case study from Volcan de Fuego, Guatemala
AU - Watson, Matthew
AU - Chigna, G.
AU - Wood, Kieran
AU - Richardson, T.
AU - Liu, Emma
AU - Schellenberg, B.
AU - Thomas, H.
AU - Naismith, Ailsa
PY - 2017/12/1
Y1 - 2017/12/1
N2 - Volcan de Fuego, Guatemala, is one of Central America's most active
systems. More than one hundred thousand people live within ten
kilometres of the summit, many of them in profound poverty. Both the
summit region and the volcano's steep sided valleys present significant
access challenges, mostly associated with unacceptably high risk.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) offer the opportunity to observe, map
and quantify emissions of tephra, gas, lava and heat flux and, using
structure from motion algorithms, model dynamic topography. During
recent campaigns, the team have completed observations of changes in the
summit morphology immediately prior a paroxysmal eruption, mapped the
key drainage systems after the fifth of May 2017 eruption and sampled
the plume for tephra and gases using a range of onboard instruments. I
will present the group's findings within a broader context of hazard
mitigation and physical volcanology, and discuss the future of UAVs in
volcano monitoring and research.
AB - Volcan de Fuego, Guatemala, is one of Central America's most active
systems. More than one hundred thousand people live within ten
kilometres of the summit, many of them in profound poverty. Both the
summit region and the volcano's steep sided valleys present significant
access challenges, mostly associated with unacceptably high risk.
Unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) offer the opportunity to observe, map
and quantify emissions of tephra, gas, lava and heat flux and, using
structure from motion algorithms, model dynamic topography. During
recent campaigns, the team have completed observations of changes in the
summit morphology immediately prior a paroxysmal eruption, mapped the
key drainage systems after the fifth of May 2017 eruption and sampled
the plume for tephra and gases using a range of onboard instruments. I
will present the group's findings within a broader context of hazard
mitigation and physical volcanology, and discuss the future of UAVs in
volcano monitoring and research.
UR - https://research-information.bris.ac.uk/en/publications/47d12fa3-eae2-4646-805f-eb256ce7a4be
M3 - Abstract
ER -