About this Research Topic
In this context, one of the main research challenges for Geomorphologists and Earth Scientists is the earliest recognition and monitoring of hydrological and meteorological events that can trigger geomorphological processes, and their short- and long-term consequences on the landscape. An increase in the frequency of above-average hydro-meteorological events and their consequences such as floods or mass movements of increased magnitude or frequency are recorded both in the Temperate Zone and the High-Arctic where they have rarely been observed before. On the other hand, intense rainfall events affect geomorphic processes in the Dry Zone.
The proposed Research Topic entitled 'Detection, Measurement and Modelling of Modern Geomorphic Processes: From Source to Sink and From Survey to Models' is addressed to a wide group of specialists from various disciplines, both environmental researchers (geologists, hydrogeologists, geophysicists, geographers, geomorphologists, soil scientists) and specialists dealing with the consequences on society (planners, human geographers, anthropologists, etc.). We call you to publish results of works describing contemporary climate-derived changes of landforms, detection and monitoring of geomorphic processes and their consequences, but also the applicability of novelties in the methodology of these studies using direct and remote sensing surveys. An important aspect is also the impact of these events on infrastructure, urbanized areas or local communities
Keywords: geomorphic processes, change detection, source to sink, DTM, sediment connectivity, tracing
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.