The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques

Rock glaciers are the most prominent geomorphic features related to the presence of permafrost in mountain areas. Climate warming is likely to have strong impacts on permafrost status, making cold areas at high altitudes especially vulnerable. Therefore, climate evolution and its impact on abiotic a...

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Main Authors: COLOMBO, NICOLA, FRATIANNI, SIMONA, GUENZI, DIEGO, ACQUAOTTA, FIORELLA, GIARDINO, Marco, PEROTTI, Luigi, FREPPAZ, Michele, GODONE, DANILO FRANCESCO, SAID PULLICINO, DANIEL, ISAIA, MARCO, E. Giaccone, G. Viviano, F. Salerno, R. Balestrini, C. Delconte, G. Tartari, W. Alberto, A. Tamburini, M. Gobbi, A. Merlone, S. Gruber
Other Authors: N. Colombo, S. Fratianni, D. Guenzi, F. Acquaotta, M. Giardino, L. Perotti, M. Freppaz, D. Godone, D. Said Pullicino, M. Isaia
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: S. Perona, S. Casale 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2318/149509
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author COLOMBO, NICOLA
FRATIANNI, SIMONA
GUENZI, DIEGO
ACQUAOTTA, FIORELLA
GIARDINO, Marco
PEROTTI, Luigi
FREPPAZ, Michele
GODONE, DANILO FRANCESCO
SAID PULLICINO, DANIEL
ISAIA, MARCO
E. Giaccone
G. Viviano
F. Salerno
R. Balestrini
C. Delconte
G. Tartari
W. Alberto
A. Tamburini
M. Gobbi
A. Merlone
S. Gruber
author2 N. Colombo
S. Fratianni
D. Guenzi
F. Acquaotta
E. Giaccone
M. Giardino
L. Perotti
M. Freppaz
D. Godone
D. Said Pullicino
G. Viviano
F. Salerno
R. Balestrini
C. Delconte
G. Tartari
W. Alberto
A. Tamburini
M. Isaia
M. Gobbi
A. Merlone
S. Gruber
author_facet COLOMBO, NICOLA
FRATIANNI, SIMONA
GUENZI, DIEGO
ACQUAOTTA, FIORELLA
GIARDINO, Marco
PEROTTI, Luigi
FREPPAZ, Michele
GODONE, DANILO FRANCESCO
SAID PULLICINO, DANIEL
ISAIA, MARCO
E. Giaccone
G. Viviano
F. Salerno
R. Balestrini
C. Delconte
G. Tartari
W. Alberto
A. Tamburini
M. Gobbi
A. Merlone
S. Gruber
author_sort COLOMBO, NICOLA
collection Università degli studi di Torino: AperTo (Archivio Istituzionale ad Accesso Aperto)
description Rock glaciers are the most prominent geomorphic features related to the presence of permafrost in mountain areas. Climate warming is likely to have strong impacts on permafrost status, making cold areas at high altitudes especially vulnerable. Therefore, climate evolution and its impact on abiotic and biotic components of permafrost environments is a research topic of increasing importance. In this work the active Col d’Olen rock glacier, located in the Istituto Mosso LTER (Long Term Ecological Research) site, in the Aosta Valley Region (NW-Italian Alps), is the object of an interdisciplinary investigation. Instrumentation and techniques are described below. Climatic data from automatic weather stations have been collected in the study area and they will be updated and analysed. Moreover, a network of portable instruments will be established (during the summer 2014) on the rock glacier for collecting meteorological data, after a dedicated calibration procedures to assess the uncertainties of the measures, in the framework of MeteoMet2 project. The physical and chemical characteristics of the rock glacier outflow are under investigation by using temperature dataloggers and a multi-parametric probe spectro::lyserTM (NO3-N and DOC). Regular sampling of water on weekly basis has been also established for investigating major ion concentrations (e.g. Ca2+, Mg2+, etc.), trace elements (e.g. Ni, Si, etc.) and isotopic analyses (δ18O). Moreover, the chemical characteristics of snow and fine-grained material are under analysis. The ground surface temperature monitoring will be conducted using Maxim iButton® DS1922L mini-thermocrons and Hobo TidbiTv2 temperature loggers, regularly distributed on the rock glacier’s surface and in a few selected surrounding sites. Total station and differential GNSS instruments will allow an accurate grid distribution and to acquire the coordinates of the dataloggers. In addition, high resolution digital terrain models (DTM’s) and thermal images of the rock glacier area will be obtained from ...
format Conference Object
genre permafrost
genre_facet permafrost
id ftunivtorino:oai:iris.unito.it:2318/149509
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftunivtorino
op_relation ispartofbook:List of abstracts
The Future of the Glaciers. From the past to the next 100 years
firstpage:13
lastpage:13
numberofpages:1
http://hdl.handle.net/2318/149509
publishDate 2014
publisher S. Perona, S. Casale
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivtorino:oai:iris.unito.it:2318/149509 2025-01-17T00:15:29+00:00 The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques COLOMBO, NICOLA FRATIANNI, SIMONA GUENZI, DIEGO ACQUAOTTA, FIORELLA GIARDINO, Marco PEROTTI, Luigi FREPPAZ, Michele GODONE, DANILO FRANCESCO SAID PULLICINO, DANIEL ISAIA, MARCO E. Giaccone G. Viviano F. Salerno R. Balestrini C. Delconte G. Tartari W. Alberto A. Tamburini M. Gobbi A. Merlone S. Gruber N. Colombo S. Fratianni D. Guenzi F. Acquaotta E. Giaccone M. Giardino L. Perotti M. Freppaz D. Godone D. Said Pullicino G. Viviano F. Salerno R. Balestrini C. Delconte G. Tartari W. Alberto A. Tamburini M. Isaia M. Gobbi A. Merlone S. Gruber 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/2318/149509 eng eng S. Perona, S. Casale country:ITA place:Torino ispartofbook:List of abstracts The Future of the Glaciers. From the past to the next 100 years firstpage:13 lastpage:13 numberofpages:1 http://hdl.handle.net/2318/149509 info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2014 ftunivtorino 2023-06-20T22:30:27Z Rock glaciers are the most prominent geomorphic features related to the presence of permafrost in mountain areas. Climate warming is likely to have strong impacts on permafrost status, making cold areas at high altitudes especially vulnerable. Therefore, climate evolution and its impact on abiotic and biotic components of permafrost environments is a research topic of increasing importance. In this work the active Col d’Olen rock glacier, located in the Istituto Mosso LTER (Long Term Ecological Research) site, in the Aosta Valley Region (NW-Italian Alps), is the object of an interdisciplinary investigation. Instrumentation and techniques are described below. Climatic data from automatic weather stations have been collected in the study area and they will be updated and analysed. Moreover, a network of portable instruments will be established (during the summer 2014) on the rock glacier for collecting meteorological data, after a dedicated calibration procedures to assess the uncertainties of the measures, in the framework of MeteoMet2 project. The physical and chemical characteristics of the rock glacier outflow are under investigation by using temperature dataloggers and a multi-parametric probe spectro::lyserTM (NO3-N and DOC). Regular sampling of water on weekly basis has been also established for investigating major ion concentrations (e.g. Ca2+, Mg2+, etc.), trace elements (e.g. Ni, Si, etc.) and isotopic analyses (δ18O). Moreover, the chemical characteristics of snow and fine-grained material are under analysis. The ground surface temperature monitoring will be conducted using Maxim iButton® DS1922L mini-thermocrons and Hobo TidbiTv2 temperature loggers, regularly distributed on the rock glacier’s surface and in a few selected surrounding sites. Total station and differential GNSS instruments will allow an accurate grid distribution and to acquire the coordinates of the dataloggers. In addition, high resolution digital terrain models (DTM’s) and thermal images of the rock glacier area will be obtained from ... Conference Object permafrost Università degli studi di Torino: AperTo (Archivio Istituzionale ad Accesso Aperto)
spellingShingle COLOMBO, NICOLA
FRATIANNI, SIMONA
GUENZI, DIEGO
ACQUAOTTA, FIORELLA
GIARDINO, Marco
PEROTTI, Luigi
FREPPAZ, Michele
GODONE, DANILO FRANCESCO
SAID PULLICINO, DANIEL
ISAIA, MARCO
E. Giaccone
G. Viviano
F. Salerno
R. Balestrini
C. Delconte
G. Tartari
W. Alberto
A. Tamburini
M. Gobbi
A. Merlone
S. Gruber
The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques
title The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques
title_full The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques
title_fullStr The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques
title_full_unstemmed The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques
title_short The Istituto Mosso LTER site (Aosta Valley, Italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. Site instrumentation and techniques
title_sort istituto mosso lter site (aosta valley, italy): an integrated research - monitoring in an alpine permafrost area. site instrumentation and techniques
url http://hdl.handle.net/2318/149509