598 research outputs found

    Flood risk assessment at municipal level in the Tillabéri region, Niger

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    The Tillabéri region (population 2.7 million, 97,250 km2) is the hinterland of the Niger’s capital city and the second most susceptible region to flooding of the country, with 416 settlements hit from 2008 to 2013. This chapter aims to present the potential benefits of flood risk assessment at municipal scale: a tool that can help local authorities in disaster risk reduction. Risk (R) is considered here a function of Hazard (H), Exposure (E) and Damages (D) according the equation R = H * E * D. Risk is measured using six indicators. The probability in each year to have e rain causing settlement flooding is measured for each municipality using daily rainfall from meteorological stations (1981-2010) and three-hourly Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) datasets by NOAA (1998-2011). Settlements flooded (E), people affected, homes destroyed, fields flooded and livestock killed (D) are sourced from Niger’s early warning system and disaster prevention unit (EWS DP), all errors corrected and units of measurement standardised. From the results, it emerged that 765 settlements have been flooded between 1998 and 2013. Contrary to what one might expect, the floods caused by the swelling of the River Niger hit few settlements. Most of the areas susceptible to flooding are located in the vast Bosso and Maouri dallols, two fossil rivers that run from Mali towards Niger for over 300 km. The right-bank tributaries of the Niger and along the minor hydrographic network are the next most affected areas. 95 settlements were hit more than once and 19 flooded in two or more consecutive years. Seven municipalities out of 41 are at very high or high risk of being flooded. These are crossed by the River Niger or by its main tributaries on the right bank, by the Ouallam intermittent creek or the Bosso dallol. Seven municipalities show damage in three areas (people, dwellings, fields)

    U–Pb zircon geochronology of volcanic deposits from the Permian basin of the Orobic Alps (Southern Alps, Lombardy): chronostratigraphic and geological implications

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    U\u2013Pb zircon ages from volcanic rocks of Early Permian age (Southern Alps, Lombardy), associated with fault-controlled transtensional continental basins, were determined with the laser ablation (LA)-ICP-MS technique. Four samples were collected at the base and at the top of the up to 1000 m thick volcaniclastic unit of the Cabianca Volcanite. This unit pre-dates the development of a sedimentary succession that still contains, at different stratigraphic levels, volcanic intercalations. Age results from a tuff in the basal part of the unit constrain the onset of the volcanic activity to 280 \ub1 2.5 Ma. Ignimbritic samples from the upper part of the unit show a large scatter in the age distribution. This is interpreted as the occurrence of antecrystic and autocrystic zircons. The youngest autocrystic zircons (c. 270 Ma) are thus interpreted as better constraining the eruption age, constraining the duration of the volcanic activity in the Orobic Basin to about 10 Ma. The new geochronological results compared with those of other Early Permian basins of the Southern Alps reveal important differences that may reflect (1) a real time-transgressive beginning and end of the volcanic activity or (2) the complex mixing of antecrystic and autocrystic zircon populations in the analysed samples

    Atmospheric nitrogen deposition in a highly human impacted area in northern Italy

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    Nitrogen can enter the water cycle through atmospheric depositions on ground and water surfaces, leakages from point and diffuse sources (i.e., sewage treatment plants or sewage systems, fertilizer and manure applications), and erosion processes affecting nitrogen rich soils (EEA, 2005). However, integrating all nitrogen forms, processes and scales is still a major challenge for the understanding and the management of the nitrogen cycle

    U-Th-Pb “multi-phase” approach to the study of crystalline basement: application to the northernmost sector of the Ivrea-Verbano Zone (Alps)

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    In situ U-Pb geochronology was carried out on amphibolites and siliciclastic metasediments of the Kinzigite Formation exposed in the northernmost sector of the Ivrea-Verbano Zone (Finero area). The aim is to shed light on the tectono-metamorphic evolution of this intermediate-lower crustal section and its bearing with the evolution of the southern and better known sectors of the Ivrea-Verbano Zone. Based on eld observation and petrography, a metamorphic gradient gently increasing from amphibolite to upper amphibolite facies (from SE to NW) characterizes the whole metamorphic sequence. Granulite facies conditions are reached only by the slivers (septa) of the Kinzigite Formation into the External Gabbro unit of the Finero Ma c Complex. Metapelites consist mainly of biotite, quartz, plagioclase, garnet, and brolitic to prismatic sillimanite; muscovite progressively disappears as K-feldspar appears and becomes abundant. Amphibolites are made of green-brown hornblende and plagioclase and may contain clinopyroxene de ning thin layers together with plagioclase and titanite. Both metapelites and amphibolites show mylonitic deformation which is more intense towards NW, i.e. towards the lower structural levels. The mylonitic deformation strongly affected the lower crustal metabasic rocks of External Gabbro unit (Finero Ma c Complex). Zircon, monazite and titanite U-Pb geochronology was carried out with laser ablation (LA)- ICP-MS on amphibolites, migmatitic paragneiss and septa. The multi-chronological approach allowed recognizing three discrete tectono-metamorphic events, at Permian, Triassic and Jurassic. Zircon and monazite yielded Permian ages suggesting (re)crystallization during an high temperature event characterized by both metamorphism and magmatism. Titanite dating provided Triassic and Jurassic ages, that were interpreted as U-Pb resetting ages. A Triassic perturbation of the U-Pb system was also recorded by zircon and monazite as rare domains. The tectono-metamorphic reconstruction of the evolution of the northernmost Ivrea- Verbano Zone, as revealed by the new geochronological data, is only partially in agreement with the temperature-time evolutions depicted for the southern sectors of the Ivrea-VerbanoZone. Permian ages indicating magmatism and high temperature metamorphism are common throughout the Ivrea-Verbano Zone, as well as the Jurassic ages related to local thermal pulses likely related to lithospheric thinning and associated lithospheric advection. Conversely, the occurrence of Triassic ages is peculiar of the Finero area. Two possible explanations may account for this Triassic event: Triassic ages are possibly related to the thermal effect and uid circulation during the emplacement of the External Gabbro unit; or alternatively, they are the response to the ductile deformation largely recognized in the whole area. This study is a further evidence of the necessity of approaching crystalline basement with multiple geochronometers in order to unravel the complete tectono-metamorphic evolution
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