Freeze-thaw action induces both rock weathering and mass wasting, destabilizing rock and debris slopes in high mountain regions. Matsuoka, in 1990, defines an Effective Freeze-Thaw Cycle (EFTC) as a fall below -2 °C of the rock surface temperature followed by a rise above +2 °C. Rock temperatures in alpine environments are strongly influenced by slope inclination, slope aspect, local topoclimatic conditions (including seasonal snow cover), and thermal properties of the rock. Our main objectives are: to investigate rock and air temperature variability in an instrumented site at high elevation in the Western Alps of Italy, to identify rockfall events occurred in the monitoring
Freeze-thaw cycles in the rocks of the Bessanese experimental site (Western Alps, Italy) / Viani, Cristina; Chiarle, Marta; Merlone, Andrea; Musacchio, Chiara; Coppa, Graziano; Nigrelli, Guido. - (2019). (Intervento presentato al convegno 23rd Alpine Glaciology Meeting tenutosi a Vienna, Austria nel 28 febbraio - 1 marzo 2019).
Freeze-thaw cycles in the rocks of the Bessanese experimental site (Western Alps, Italy)
Andrea Merlone;Chiara Musacchio;Graziano Coppa;
2019
Abstract
Freeze-thaw action induces both rock weathering and mass wasting, destabilizing rock and debris slopes in high mountain regions. Matsuoka, in 1990, defines an Effective Freeze-Thaw Cycle (EFTC) as a fall below -2 °C of the rock surface temperature followed by a rise above +2 °C. Rock temperatures in alpine environments are strongly influenced by slope inclination, slope aspect, local topoclimatic conditions (including seasonal snow cover), and thermal properties of the rock. Our main objectives are: to investigate rock and air temperature variability in an instrumented site at high elevation in the Western Alps of Italy, to identify rockfall events occurred in the monitoringFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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