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Will Smith

Will's PhD project title is 'Landslides onto glaciers: detection, magnitude-frequencies, and delivery of limiting nutrients in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska'. Read more about Will's research.

Project title

Landslides onto glaciers: detection, magnitude-frequencies, and delivery of limiting nutrients in Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska

Supervisors

Research Clusters

Physical Geography

Project description

Rock avalanches are a subset of landslides defined as rapid, large slope failures that exhibit flow-like motion of fragmented rock from a large rockslide or rockfall. In glacial environments these events are believed to be increasing in frequency, as a response to warming temperatures, causing ice-retreat and thinning, and permafrost degradation. If these events are increasing it is important to understand their potential effects on the glacial and extra-glacial environment. This project has three main aims: i) create a standard, reliable detection method for identifying glacially deposited rock avalanches, ii) assess their magnitude-frequency relationship in glacial environments, and, iii) quantify their ability to deliver certain limiting nutrients into glacial and extra-glacial environments.

Publications

Smith, W. D., Dunning, S. A., Brough, S., Ross, N., and Telling, J.: GERALDINE (Google Earth Engine supRaglAciaL Debris INput dEtector): a new tool for identifying and monitoring supraglacial landslide inputs, Earth Surf. Dynam., 8, 1053–1065,  2020. 

Teaching

GEO2137 Key Methods for Physical Geographers

GEO3128 Polar Environments

GEO3144 Landslides from Pole to Pole

GEO2226 Glacial Environments