997 resultados para LANDFORMS


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Innerhalb des Untersuchungsgebiets Schleswig-Holstein wurden 39.712 topographische Hohlformen detektiert. Genutzt wurden dazu ESRI ArcMap 9.3 und 10.0. Der Datenaufbereitung folgten weitere Kalkulationen in MATLAB R2010b. Jedes Objekt wurde räumlich mit seinen individuellen Eigenschaften verschnitten. Dazu gehörten Fläche, Umfang, Koordinaten (Zentroide), Tiefe und maximale Tiefe der Hohlform und Formfaktoren wie Rundheit, Konvexität und Elongation. Ziel der vorgestellten Methoden war die Beantwortung von drei Fragestellungen: Sind negative Landformen dazu geeignet Landschaftseinheiten und Eisvorstöße zu unterscheiden und zu bestimmen? Existiert eine Kopplung von Depressionen an der rezenten Topographie zu geologischen Tiefenstrukturen? Können Senken unterschiedlicher Entstehung anhand ihrer Formcharakteristik unterteilt werden? Die vorgenommene Klassifikation der großen Landschaftseinheiten basiert auf der Annahme, dass sowohl Jungmoränengebiete, ihre Vorflächen als auch Altmoränengebiete durch charakteristische, abflusslose Hohlformen, wie Toteislöcher, Seen, etc. abgegrenzt werden können. Normalerweise sind solche Depressionen in der Natur eher selten, werden jedoch für ehemalige Glaziallandschaften als typisch erachtet. Ziel war es, die geologischen Haupteinheiten, Eisvorstöße und Moränengebiete der letzten Vereisungen zu differenzieren. Zur Bearbeitung wurde ein Detektionsnetz verwendet, das auf quadratischen Zellen beruht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass durch die alleinige Nutzung von Depressionen zur Klassifizierung von Landschaftseinheiten Gesamtgenauigkeiten von bis zu 71,4% erreicht werden können. Das bedeutet, dass drei von vier Detektionszellen korrekt zugeordnet werden können. Jungmoränen, Altmoränen, periglazialeVorflächen und holozäne Bereiche können mit Hilfe der Hohlformen mit großer Sicherheit voneinander unterschieden und korrekt zugeordnet werden. Dies zeigt, dass für die jeweiligen Einheiten tatsächlich bestimmte Senkenformen typisch sind. Die im ersten Schritt detektierten Senken wurden räumlich mit weiterreichenden geologischen Informationen verschnitten, um zu untersuchen, inwieweit natürliche Depressionen nur glazial entstanden sind oder ob ihre Ausprägung auch mit tiefengeologischen Strukturen in Zusammenhang steht. 25.349 (63,88%) aller Senken sind kleiner als 10.000 m² und liegen in Jungmoränengebieten und können vermutlich auf glaziale und periglaziale Einflüsse zurückgeführt werden. 2.424 Depressionen liegen innerhalb der Gebiete subglazialer Rinnen. 1.529 detektierte Hohlformen liegen innerhalb von Subsidenzgebieten, von denen 1.033 innerhalb der Marschländer im Westen verortet sind. 919 große Strukturen über 1 km Größe entlang der Nordsee sind unter anderem besonders gut mit Kompaktionsbereichen elsterzeitlicher Rinnen zu homologisieren.344 dieser Hohlformen sind zudem mit Tunneltälern im Untergrund assoziiert. Diese Parallelität von Depressionen und den teils über 100 m tiefen Tunneltälern kann auf Sedimentkompaktion zurückgeführt werden. Ein Zusammenhang mit der Zersetzung postglazialen, organischen Materials ist ebenfalls denkbar. Darüber hinaus wurden in einer Distanz von 10 km um die miozän aktiven Flanken des Glückstadt-Grabens negative Landformen detektiert, die Verbindungen zu oberflächennahen Störungsstrukturen zeigen. Dies ist ein Anzeichen für Grabenaktivität während und gegen Ende der Vereisung und während des Holozäns. Viele dieser störungsbezogenen Senken sind auch mit Tunneltälern assoziiert. Entsprechend werden drei zusammenspielende Prozesse identifiziert, die mit der Entstehung der Hohlformen in Verbindung gebracht werden können. Eine mögliche Interpretation ist, dass die östliche Flanke des Glückstadt-Grabens auf die Auflast des elsterzeitlichen Eisschilds reagierte, während sich subglazial zeitgleich Entwässerungsrinnen entlang der Schwächezonen ausbildeten. Diese wurden in den Warmzeiten größtenteils durch Torf und unverfestigte Sedimente verfüllt. Die Gletschervorstöße der späten Weichselzeit aktivierten erneut die Flanken und zusätzlich wurde das Lockermaterial exariert, wodurch große Seen, wie z. B. der Große Plöner See entstanden sind. Insgesamt konnten 29 große Depressionen größer oder gleich 5 km in Schleswig-Holstein identifiziert werden, die zumindest teilweise mit Beckensubsidenz und Aktivität der Grabenflanken verbunden sind, bzw. sogar auf diese zurückgehen.Die letzte Teilstudie befasste sich mit der Differenzierung von Senken nach deren potentieller Genese sowie der Unterscheidung natürlicher von künstlichen Hohlformen. Dazu wurde ein DEM für einen Bereich im Norden Niedersachsens verwendet, das eine Gesamtgröße von 252 km² abdeckt. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass glazial entstandene Depressionen gute Rundheitswerte aufweisen und auch Elongation und Exzentrizität eher kompakte Formen anzeigen. Lineare negative Strukturen sind oft Flüsse oder Altarme. Sie können als holozäne Strukturen identifiziert werden. Im Gegensatz zu den potentiell natürlichen Senkenformen sind künstlich geschaffene Depressionen eher eckig oder ungleichmäßig und tendieren meist nicht zu kompakten Formen. Drei Hauptklassen topographischer Depressionen konnten identifiziert und voneinander abgegrenzt werden: Potentiell glaziale Senken (Toteisformen), Flüsse, Seiten- und Altarme sowie künstliche Senken. Die Methode der Senkenklassifikation nach Formparametern ist ein sinnvolles Instrument, um verschiedene Typen unterscheiden zu können und um bei geologischen Fragestellungen künstliche Senken bereits vor der Verarbeitung auszuschließen. Jedoch zeigte sich, dass die Ergebnisse im Wesentlichen von der Auflösung des entsprechenden Höhenmodells abhängen.

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The study was arranged to manifest its objectives through preceding it with an intro-duction. Particular attention was paid in the second part to detect the physical settings of the study area, together with an attempt to show the climatic characteristics in Libya. In the third part, observed temporal and spatial climate change in Libya was investigated through the trends of temperature, precipitation, relative humidity and cloud amount over the peri-ods (1946-2000), (1946-1975), and (1976-2000), comparing the results with the global scales. The forth part detected the natural and human causes of climate change concentrat-ing on the greenhouse effect. The potential impacts of climate change on Libya were ex-amined in the fifth chapter. As a case study, desertification of Jifara Plain was studied in the sixth part. In the seventh chapter, projections and mitigations of climate change and desertification were discussed. Ultimately, the main results and recommendations of the study were summarized. In order to carry through the objectives outlined above, the following methods and approaches were used: a simple linear regression analysis was computed to detect the trends of climatic parameters over time; a trend test based on a trend-to-noise-ratio was applied for detecting linear or non-linear trends; the non-parametric Mann-Kendall test for trend was used to reveal the behavior of the trends and their significance; PCA was applied to construct the all-Libya climatic parameters trends; aridity index after Walter-Lieth was shown for computing humid respectively arid months in Libya; correlation coefficient, (after Pearson) for detecting the teleconnection between sun spot numbers, NAOI, SOI, GHGs, and global warming, climate changes in Libya; aridity index, after De Martonne, to elaborate the trends of aridity in Jifara Plain; Geographical Information System and Re-mote Sensing techniques were applied to clarify the illustrations and to monitor desertifi-cation of Jifara Plain using the available satellite images MSS, TM, ETM+ and Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM). The results are explained by 88 tables, 96 figures and 10 photos. Temporal and spatial temperature changes in Libya indicated remarkably different an-nual and seasonal trends over the long observation period 1946-2000 and the short obser-vation periods 1946-1975 and 1976-2000. Trends of mean annual temperature were posi-tive at all study stations except at one from 1946-2000, negative trends prevailed at most stations from 1946-1975, while strongly positive trends were computed at all study stations from 1976-2000 corresponding with the global warming trend. Positive trends of mean minimum temperatures were observed at all reference stations from 1946-2000 and 1976-2000, while negative trends prevailed at most stations over the period 1946-1975. For mean maximum temperature, positive trends were shown from 1946-2000 and from 1976-2000 at most stations, while most trends were negative from 1946-1975. Minimum tem-peratures increased at nearly more than twice the rate of maximum temperatures at most stations. In respect of seasonal temperature, warming mostly occurred in summer and au-tumn in contrast to the global observations identifying warming mostly in winter and spring in both study periods. Precipitation across Libya is characterized by scanty and sporadically totals, as well as high intensities and very high spatial and temporal variabilities. From 1946-2000, large inter-annual and intra-annual variabilities were observed. Positive trends of annual precipi-tation totals have been observed from 1946-2000, negative trends from 1976-2000 at most stations. Variabilities of seasonal precipitation over Libya are more strikingly experienced from 1976-2000 than from 1951-1975 indicating a growing magnitude of climate change in more recent times. Negative trends of mean annual relative humidity were computed at eight stations, while positive trends prevailed at seven stations from 1946-2000. For the short observation period 1976-2000, positive trends were computed at most stations. Annual cloud amount totals decreased at most study stations in Libya over both long and short periods. Re-markably large spatial variations of climate changes were observed from north to south over Libya. Causes of climate change were discussed showing high correlation between tempera-ture increasing over Libya and CO2 emissions; weakly positive correlation between pre-cipitation and North Atlantic Oscillation index; negative correlation between temperature and sunspot numbers; negative correlation between precipitation over Libya and Southern Oscillation Index. The years 1992 and 1993 were shown as the coldest in the 1990s result-ing from the eruption of Mount Pinatubo, 1991. Libya is affected by climate change in many ways, in particular, crop production and food security, water resources, human health, population settlement and biodiversity. But the effects of climate change depend on its magnitude and the rate with which it occurs. Jifara Plain, located in northwestern Libya, has been seriously exposed to desertifica-tion as a result of climate change, landforms, overgrazing, over-cultivation and population growth. Soils have been degraded, vegetation cover disappeared and the groundwater wells were getting dry in many parts. The effect of desertification on Jifara Plain appears through reducing soil fertility and crop productivity, leading to long-term declines in agri-cultural yields, livestock yields, plant standing biomass, and plant biodiversity. Desertifi-cation has also significant implications on livestock industry and the national economy. Desertification accelerates migration from rural and nomadic areas to urban areas as the land cannot support the original inhabitants. In the absence of major shifts in policy, economic growth, energy prices, and con-sumer trends, climate change in Libya and desertification of Jifara Plain are expected to continue in the future. Libya cooperated with United Nations and other international organizations. It has signed and ratified a number of international and regional agreements which effectively established a policy framework for actions to mitigate climate change and combat deserti-fication. Libya has implemented several laws and legislative acts, with a number of ancil-lary and supplementary rules to regulate. Despite the current efforts and ongoing projects being undertaken in Libya in the field of climate change and desertification, urgent actions and projects are needed to mitigate climate change and combat desertification in the near future.

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This thesis tries to interpret the origin and evolution of karst-like forms present in Arabia Terra, a region of Mars that develops in the equatorial zone of the planet. The work has been carried out specifically in the craters Crommelin (4o 91’ N-10o 51’ E), 12000088 (3o 48’ N-1o 30’ E), NE 12000088 (4° 20’ N-2° 50’ E), C "2" (3° 54’ N-1° W), and in their surrounding areas. These craters contain layered deposits characterized by a high albedo and on which erosion is very pronounced. The area containing the craters is a plateau that has the same characteristics of albedo and texture. The preliminary morphological study has made use of instrumentation such as the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), in particular HiRISE images (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment), CTX (Context Camera) and CRISM (Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometers for Mars). A regional geomorphological map has been drawn up containing the main morphotypes, and detailed geomorphological maps were prepared for different karst-like morphologies. The analysis of spectral data collected from CRISM instrumentation has allowed to identify the footprint of sulphate minerals in the external area. Data were collected for morphometric negative forms (karst-like) and positive forms (mud volcanoes, dikes and pingos). For the analysis of the relief forms DTMs (Digital Terrain Models) produced by the union of stereographic CTX couples or HiRISE were used. From the analysis of high-resolution images morphological footprints similar to periglacial environments have been identified, including the presence of patterned ground and polygonal cracks found all over the area of investigation, and relief structures similar to pingos present in the crater C "2". These observations allow us to imagine a geological past with a cold climate at the equator able to freeze the few fluids present in the Martian arid terrain. The development of karst-like landforms, on the other hand, can be attributed to a subsequent improval of the weather conditions that led to a normal climate regime for the equatorial areas, resulting in the degradation of the permafrost. The melt waters have thus allowed the partial dissolution of the sulphate layers. The karst-like forms look rather fresh suggesting them to be not that old.

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In the past few decades the impacts of climate warming have been significant in alpine glaciated regions. Many valley glaciers formerly linked as distributary glaciers to high-level icecaps have decoupled at their icefalls, exposing major escarpments and generating a suite of dynamic landforrns dominated by mass wasting. Ice-dominated landforms, here termed icy debris fans, develop rapidly by ice avalanching, rockfall, and icy debris flow. Field-based reconnaissance studies at two alpine settings, the Wrangell Mountains of Alaska and the Southern Alps of New Zealand, provide a preliminary morphogenetic model of spatial and temporal evolution of icy debris fans in a range of alpine settings. The influence of these processes on landform evolution is largely unrecognized in the literature dealing with post-glacial landform adjustment known as the paraglacial. A better understanding of these dynamic processes will be increasingly important because of the extreme geohazards characterizing these areas. Our field studies show that after glacier decoupling, icy debris fans begin to form along the base of bedrock escarpments at the mouths of catchments and prograde over valley glaciers. The presence of a distinct catchment, apex, and fan morphology distinguishes these landforms from other landforms common in periglacial hillslope settings receiving abundant clastic debris and ice. Ice avalanching is the most abundant process involved in icy debris fan formation. Fans developed below weakly incised catchments are dominated by ice avalanching and are composed primarily of ice with minor lithic detritus. Typically, avalanches fall into the fan catchments where sediments transform into grainflows that flow onto the fans. Once on the fans, avalanche deposits ablate rapidly, flattening and concentrating lithic fragments at the surface. Icy debris fans may become thick enough to become glaciers with splay crevasse systems. Fans developed below larger, more complex catchments are composed of higher proportions of lithic detritus resulting from temporary storage of ice and lithic detritus deposits within the catchment. Episodic outbursts of meltwater from the icecap may mix with the stored sediments and mobilize icy debris flows (mixture of ice and lithic clasts) onto the fans. Our observations indicate that the entire evolutionary cycle of icy debris fans probably occurs during an early paraglacial interval (i.e., decades to 100 years). Observations comparing avalanche frequency, volume, and fan morphologic evolution at the Alaska site between 2006 and 2010 illustrate complex response between icy debris fans even within the same cirque - where one fan may be growing while others are downwasting because of differences in ice supply controlled by their respective catchments and icecap contributions. As ice supply from the icecap diminishes through time, icy debris fans rapidly downwaste and eventually evolve into talus cones that receive occasional but ephemeral ice avalanches.

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Icy debris fans have are newly-described landforms (Kochel and Trop, 2008 and 2012) as landforms developed immediately after deglaciation on Earth and similar features have been observed on Mars. Subsurface characteristics of Icy debris fans have not been previously investigated. Ground penetrating radar (GPR) was used to non-invasively investigate the subsurface characteristics of icy debris fans near McCarthy, Alaska, USA. The three fans investigated in Alaska are the East, West, and Middle fans (Kochel and Trop, 2008 and 2012) which below the Nabesna ice cap and on top of the McCarthy Creek Glacier. Icy debris fans in general are a largely unexplored suite of paraglacial landforms and processes in alpine regions. Recent field studies focused on direct observations and depositional processes. Their results showed that the fan's composition is primarily influenced by the type and frequency of depositional processes that supply the fan. Photographic studies show that the East Fan receives far more ice and snow avalanches whereas the Middle and West Fans receive fewer mass wasting events but more clastic debris is deposited on the Middle and West fan from rock falls and icy debris flows. GPR profiles and Wide-angle reflection and refraction (WARR) surveys consisting of both, common mid-point (CMP), and common shot-point (CSP) surveys investigated the subsurface geometry of the fans and the McCarthy Creek Glacier. All GPR surveys were collected in July of 2013 with 100MHz bi-static antennas. Four axial profiles and three cross-fan profiles were done on the West and Middle fans as well as the McCarthy Creek Glacier in order to investigate the relationship between the three features. GPR profiles yielded reflectors that were continuous for 10+ m and hyperbolic reflections in the subsurface. The depth to these reflections in the subsurface requires knowledge of the velocity of the subsurface. To find the velocity of the subsurface eight WARR surveys collected on the fans and on the McCarthy Creek glacier to provide information on variability of subsurface velocities. The profiles of the Middle and West fan have more reflections in their profiles compared to profiles done on the McCarthy Creek Glacier. Based on the WARR surveys, we interpret the lower energy return in the glacier to be caused by two reasons. 1) The increased attenuation due to wet ice versus drier ice and on the fan with GPR velocities >0.15m/ns. 2) Lack of interfaces in the glacier compared to those in the fans which are inferred to be produced by the alternating layers of stratified ice and lithic-rich layers. The GPR profiles on the West and Middle Fans show the shallow subsurface being dominated by lenticular reflections interpreted to be consistent with the shape of surficial deposits. The West Fan is distinguished from the Middle Fan by the nature of its reflections patterns and thicknesses of reflection packages that clearly shows the Middle fan with a greater thickness. The changes in subsurface reflections between the Middle and West Fans as well as the McCarthy Creek Glacier are thought to reflect the type and frequency of depositional processes and surrounding bedrock and talus slopes.