638 research outputs found

    Heat flux measurement from thermal infrared imagery in low-flux fumarolic zones: Example of the Ty fault (La Soufrière de Guadeloupe)

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    International audienceMonitoring the geothermal flux of a dormant volcano is necessary both for hazard assessment and for studying hydrothermal systems. Heat from a magma body located at depth is transported by steam to the surface, where it is expelled in fumaroles if the heat flow exceeds 500 W/m2. If the heat flow is lower than 500 W/m2, steam mainly condensates in the soil close to surface and produces a thermal anomaly detectable at the surface. In this study, we propose a method to quantify low heat fluxes from temperature anomalies measured at the surface by a thermal infrared camera. Once corrected from the atmospheric and surface effects, thermal infrared images are used to compute (1) the excess of radiative flux, (2) the excess of sensible flux and (3) the steam flux from the soil to the atmosphere. These calculations require measurements of atmospheric parameters (temperature, wind velocity and humidity) and estimations of surface parameters (roughness and emissivity). This method has been tested on a low-flux fumarolic zone of the Soufrière volcano (Guadeloupe Island -- Lesser Antilles), and compared to a flux estimation realized from the thermal gradient measurements into the soil. The two methods show a good agreement and a similar precision (267 ± 46 W/m2 for the thermal infrared method, and 275 ± 50 W/m2 for the vertical temperature gradient method), if surface roughness is well calibrated

    Landslide velocity, thickness, and rheology from remote sensing: La Clapière landslide, France

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    International audienceQuantifying the velocity, volume, and rheology of deep, slow-moving landslides is essential for hazard prediction and understanding landscape evolution, but existing field-based methods are difficult or impossible to implement at remote sites. Here we present a novel and widely applicable method for constraining landslide 3-D deformation and thickness by inverting surface change data from repeat stereo imagery. Our analysis of La Clapière, an ~1 km2 bedrock landslide, reveals a concave-up failure surface with considerable roughness over length scales of tens of meters. Calibrating the thickness model with independent, local thickness measurements, we find a maximum thickness of 163 m and a rheology consistent with distributed deformation of the highly fractured landslide material, rather than sliding of an intact, rigid block. The technique is generally applicable to any mass movements that can be monitored by active or historic remote sensing

    Long term evolution and internal architecture of a high-energy banner ridge from seismic survey of Banc du Four (Western Brittany, France)

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    International audienceThe recent completion of a coupled seismic and swath bathymetric survey, conducted across the sand ridge system of the Banc du Four located on the Atlantic continental shelf of Brittany (Mer d’Iroise, France), provided new data for the study of the long term evolution of deep tidal sand ridges. Five seismic units are distinguished within the ridge, separated by pronounced major bounding surfaces. The basal unit is interpreted to be shoreface deposits forming the core of the ridge. It is overlaid by a succession of marine sand dunes fields forming the upper units. Sandwave climbing, which combines progradation and accretion, is the major process controlling the growth of the ridge. The elevation of the preserved dune foresets reaches values of about 20–30 m within the ridge. The foresets indicate a combination of giant dunes characterized by numerous steep (up to 20°) clinoforms corresponding to a high-energy depositional environment. Moreover, the presence of scour pits linked to the 3D geometries of giant dunes allow the growth of bedforms migrating oblique to the orientation of giant dune crest lines. All of the radiocarbon ages of the biogenic surficial deposits of the Banc du Four range from 10,036 to 2748 cal years B.P. and suggest the Banc du Four has grown during the last sea-level rise. The apparent absence of recent surface deposits could be caused by a change in benthic biogenic productivity or the non-conservation of recent deposits. In contrast, the presence of relatively old sands at the top of the ridge could be explained by the reworking and leakage of the lower units that outcrop locally at the seabed across the ridge. Moreover, the long-term evolution of the ridge appears strongly controlled by the morphology of the igneous basement. The multiphase accretion of the ridge is closely linked to the presence of a residual tidal current eddy, consecutive with the progressive flooding of the coastal promontories and straits that structured the igneous basement.Therefore, the Banc du Four should be thought of as a representative example of a large-scale high-energy banner bank

    Rapport sur le suivi morphosédimentaire du sillon de Talbert pour l'année 2015

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    La présente étude s’inscrit dans la continuité du suivi topo‐morphologique du Sillon de Talbert initié en 2003 à la demande de la commune de Pleubian et du Conservatoire du Littoral. L’objectif est d’analyser les modalités d’évolution de la flèche depuis l’enlèvement de l’enrochement en 2004 (Stéphan et al., 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2015 ; Fichaut et al., 2010, 2013). Dans le cadre de ce rapport, nous présentons les principaux changements morphologiques survenus entre les levés topographiques effectués aux mois de septembre 2014 et septembre 2015 à l’échelledu Sillon. La méthode que nous avons employée pour reconstituer la topographie de l’estran respecte en partie le protocole de mesure détaillé dans nos précédents rapports. Elle s’appuie sur l’acquisition de mesures topographiques au DGPS (type TopCon HiperV) à partir d’une station fixe installée sur la borne IGN située sur le sémaphore de Créac’h Maout, dont les coordonnées géodésiques sont accessibles sur le site de l’IGN (www.ign.fr/ rubrique Géodésie). Toutefois, il faut noter que quelques changements ont été introduit cette année et nécessite de faire un nouveau point méthodologique. Il faut noter que le levé de 2015 fait suite aux grosses tempêtes de l’hiver 2013‐ 2014. Ce dernier a été l’un des plus tempétueux qu’a connu la Bretagne au cours des deux dernières décennies. Entre les mois d’octobre 2013 et de mars 2014, une douzaine de tempêtes majeures se sont succédé sur les côtes françaises de l’Atlantique et de la Manche, associant des vents violents, de fortes pluviométries et de fortes houles océaniques (Blaise et al., 2015). Ce contexte, particulièrement propice au mouvement des sédiments sur le littoral, a entraîné un démaigrissement de nombreuses plages de Bretagne. La forte fréquence de ces événements durant l’hiver a abouti, à plusieurs reprises, à la conjonction d’une mer très agitée et d’une marée de vive‐eau. Durant les pleines mers, l’action des vagues a été portée dans les parties hautes de l’estran, rarement atteintes par la mer. Conjuguée à des coefficients de marée importants et des surcotes significatives, la forte agitation marine a généré des niveaux d’eau instantanés très élevés. Les vagues ont donc franchi de nombreux cordons de galets. Compte tenu de son exposition aux houles, le Sillon de Talbert a été frappé de plein fouet par ces phénomènes. Toutefois, la comparaison des levés réalisés entre mars 2014 et septembre 2014 a montré que le cordon était en cours de régénération post‐tempête, liée aux conditions météo‐océaniques plus calmes qui ont agi durant cette période (Stéphan et al., 2015). Il s'agissait donc de voir si le levé de l'année 2015 confirmait ou pas cette tendance à la régénération du sillon de Talbert

    DRELIO : Un drone hélicoptère pour le suivi des zones littorales

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    International audienceLa connaissance du littoral, sa protection, son aménagement nécessitent un suivi des changements qui s'y produisent. Toutefois, en France, devant l'étendue des façades maritimes à couvrir, les techniques de mesures in situ ne peuvent être appliquées de façon systématique. Dans ce cas, les techniques de télédétection spatiale ou aérienne sont des approches complémentaires. A partir de ces plates-formes, des images stéréoscopiques multi-temporelles sont, après une série de traitements photogrammétriques appropriés, directement exploitables sous formes d'orthophotographies et de Modèles Numériques de Terrain (MNT). Ce type de produits permet notamment la quantification des changements morphosédimentaires à l'interface Terre-Mer (transport transversal et longitudinal de sédiments, érosion,...). Actuellement, la résolution spatiale des MNT générés à partir d'images aériennes ou satellitaires (<50 cm) est insuffisante pour la plupart des applications sur la frange littorale. En outre, dans le cas d'interventions consécutives à un événement extrême (tempête, raz de marée, pollution...), ces systèmes manquent de souplesse (trajectoires prédéfinies, contraintes d'altitude, de vitesse, coût de mise en oeuvre...) L'utilisation de drones constitue donc une alternative intéressante pour des suivis de précision ou des interventions rapides

    Direct sediment transfer from land to deep-sea: Insights into shallow multibeam bathymetry at La Réunion Island

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    International audienceSubmarine canyon heads are key areas for understanding the triggering factors of gravity currents responsible for the transfer of detrital sediment to the deep basins. This contribution offers a detailed picture of canyon heads off La Réunion Island, with high-resolution multibeam bathymetry in the water depth range of 4-220 m. The present feeding of the Cilaos turbidite system, one of the largest modern volcaniclastic systems in the world, is deduced from morphological and sedimentological interpretations of newly acquired data. The study highlights small-scale sedimentary features indicating hydrodynamic and sedimentary processes. A direct connexion between the Saint-Etienne river mouth and submarine canyons is evidenced by the complete incision of the shelf and the presence of canyon heads connected to the modern deltaic bar. This direct connection, supplied by river torrential floods (cyclonic floods every two or three years), suggests the continuity of high-density fluvial flows to submarine gravity flows, forming hyperpycnal flows in the canyon. The initiation of secondary submarine gravity flows by storm waves (large austral waves and cyclonic waves) is also proposed for submarine canyons with large canyon heads developed in the surf zone from a sandy coastal bar. Bedforms in active canyon axis are considered as an indicator of the frequent activity of high-density turbidity currents. Moreover, a morphological record of last glacial and deglacial sea level variations is preserved, and particularly the Last Glacial Maximum sea level with the presence of small vertical cliffs, observed in this bathymetric data, which likely corresponds to a paleo-shoreline or paleo-reefs

    Monitoring earths surface dynamics with optical imagery

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    The increasing availability of high‐quality optical satellite images should allow, in principle, continuous monitoring of Earth's surface changes due to geologic processes, climate change, or anthropic activity. For instance, sequential optical images have been used to measure displacements at Earth's surface due to coseismic ground deformation [e.g., Van Puymbroeck et al., 2000], ice flow [Scambos et al., 1992; Berthier et al., 2005], sand dune migration [Crippen, 1992], and landslides [Kääb, 2002; Delacourt et al., 2004]. Surface changes related to agriculture, deforestation, urbanization, and erosion—which do not involve ground displacement—might also be monitored, provided that the images can be registered with sufficient accuracy. Although the approach is simple in principle, its use is still limited, mainly because of geometric distortion of the images induced by the imaging system, biased correlation techniques, and implementation difficulties

    Correlation of multi-temporal ground-based optical images for landslide monitoring

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    The objective of this work is to present a low-cost methodology to monitor the displacement of continuously active landslides from ground-based optical images analyzed with a normalized image correlation technique. The performance of the method is evaluated on a series of images acquired on the Super-Sauze landslide (South French Alps) over the period 2008-2009. The image monitoring system consists of a high resolution optical camera installed on a concrete pillar located on a stable crest in front of the landslide and controlled by a datalogger. The data are processed with a cross-correlation algorithm applied to the full resolution images in the acquisition geometry. Then, the calculated 2D displacement field is orthorectified with a back projection technique using a high resolution DEM interpolated from Airborne Laser Scanning (ALS) data. The heterogeneous displacement field of the landslide is thus characterized in time and space. The performance of the technique is assessed using differential GPS surveys as reference. The sources of error affecting the results are then discussed. The strongest limitations for the application of the technique are related to the meteorological, illumination and ground surface conditions inducing partial or complete loss of coherence among the images. Small movements of the camera and the use of a mono-temporal DEM are the most important factors affecting the accuracy of the ortho-rectification of the displacement field. As the proposed methodology can be routinely and automatically applied, it offers promising perspectives for operational applications like, for instance, in early warning systems. © 2012 International Society for Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Inc. (ISPRS)

    Matrix Metalloproteinase Gene Polymorphisms and Bronchopulmonary Dysplasia: Identification of MMP16 as a New Player in Lung Development

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    International audienceBACKGOUND: Alveolarization requires coordinated extracellular matrix remodeling, a process in which matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) play an important role. We postulated that polymorphisms in MMP genes might affect MMP function in preterm lungs and thus influence the risk of bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD). METHODS AND FINDINGS: Two hundred and eighty-four consecutive neonates with a gestational age of <28 weeks were included in this prospective study. Forty-five neonates developed BPD. Nine single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were sought in the MMP2, MMP14 and MMP16 genes. After adjustment for birth weight and ethnic origin, the TT genotype of MMP16 C/T (rs2664352) and the GG genotype of MMP16 A/G (rs2664349) were found to protect from BPD. These genotypes were also associated with a smaller active fraction of MMP2 and with a 3-fold-lower MMP16 protein level in tracheal aspirates collected within 3 days after birth. Further evaluation of MMP16 expression during the course of normal human and rat lung development showed relatively low expression during the canalicular and saccular stages and a clear increase in both mRNA and protein levels during the alveolar stage. In two newborn rat models of arrested alveolarization the lung MMP16 mRNA level was less than 50% of normal. CONCLUSIONS: MMP16 may be involved in the development of lung alveoli. MMP16 polymorphisms appear to influence not only the pulmonary expression and function of MMP16 but also the risk of BPD in premature infants
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