Geomorphic Process Chains in High‐Mountain Regions—A Review and Classification Approach for Natural Hazards Assessment

Author:

Mani Peter1,Allen Simon1,Evans Stephen G.2,Kargel Jeffrey S.3,Mergili Martin4ORCID,Petrakov Dmitry5,Stoffel Markus167ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Environmental Sciences University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

2. Department of Earth & Environmental Sciences Centre for Environmental and Information Technology University of Waterloo Waterloo ON Canada

3. Planetary Science Institute University of Arizona Tucson AZ USA

4. Institute of Geography and Regional Science University of Graz Graz Austria

5. Faculty of Geography M.V. Lomonosov Moscow State University Moscow Russia

6. Department of Earth Sciences Dendrolab.ch University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

7. Department of F.A. Forel for Environmental and Aquatic Sciences University of Geneva Geneva Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractPopulations and infrastructure in high mountain regions are exposed to a wide range of natural hazards, the frequency, magnitude, and location of which are extremely sensitive to climate change. In cases where several hazards can occur simultaneously or where the occurrence of one event will change the disposition of another, assessments need to account for complex process chains. While process chains are widely recognized as a major threat, no systematic analysis has hitherto been undertaken. We therefore establish new understanding on the factors that directly trigger or alter the disposition for subsequent events in the chain and derive a novel classification scheme and parameters to aid natural hazard assessment. Process chains in high mountains are commonly associated with glacier retreat or permafrost degradation. Regional differences exist in the nature and rate of sequencing—some process chains are almost instantaneous, while other linkages are delayed. Process chains involving rapid sequences are difficult to predict, and impacts are often devastating. We demonstrate that process chains are triggered most frequently by progressive failures, being the result of gradual landscape weakening and not due to the occurrence of a distinct process. If fluvial processes are part of the process chain the reach (or mobility) of process chains is increased. Increased mobility can also occur if sediment deposition areas along river channels are activated. As climate changes causes glacial environments to transform into sediment‐rich paraglacial and fluvial landscapes, it is expected that the mobility of process chains will increase in the future.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Geophysics

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