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  • 11. VI_2013_008

    combinations indicate the type of river, with the first letter indicating the primary type. Direct runoff river (D), presence of lakes (S), glacier-fed river (J), groundwater (L). Gauging station vhm vhm vhm vhm vhm vhm 19 10 26 145 66 64 Name Dynjandisá Svartá Sandá Vestari- Hvítá Ölfusá Jökulsá Type of river D+L D+L D+L D+J+L L+J L+D+J+S Drainage area (km 2) 42 397 267 850 1664 5687 Mean altitude (m a.s.l /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2013/VI_2013_008.pdf
  • 12. VI_2020_005

    coast, wind forcing is the primary driver of sea level extremes but less so for the Kattegat/Skagerak region than for the Baltic (M. Hieronymus, J. Hieronymus, and Arneborg, 2017). Like in Norway, atmospheric pressure is the most influential contributor to mean sea level changes on timescales up to a few years in the UK but steric changes dominate on decadal timescales (Dangendorf, Calafat, et al /media/vedurstofan-utgafa-2020/VI_2020_005.pdf
  • 13. VI_2009_006_tt

    the maximum discharge of jökulhlaup water at the glacier terminus is estimated as 97 m3 s 1. This jökulhlaup was a fast-rising jökulhlaup as other jökulhlaups in Skaftá and cannot be described by the traditional Nye-theory of jökulhlaups. The total volume of flood water was estimated as 53 Gl. The average propagation speed of the subglacial jökulhlaup flood front was found to be in the range 0.2–0.4 m s 1 /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2009/VI_2009_006_tt.pdf
  • 14. VI_2014_005

    in an overall cold bias, compared with station measurements. To test, whether this is due to the HARMONIE model core or the external surface scheme, biases of 2-m temperature from SURFEX are com- pared with biases of temperature projected from the lowest two model levels to 2 mAGL. It is found that the negative temperature biases are due to shallow inversion layers near the ground, which are introduced /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2014/VI_2014_005.pdf
  • 15. Laboratory experiments

    of snow avalanches agains dams and retarding obstacles: A laboratory study of the interaction between supercritical, shallow flows and dams (IMO Int. Rep. 03038, 2003, authors K. M. Hákonardóttir, A. Hogg and T. Jóhannesson) (pdf 1.3 Mb) Avalanche braking mound experiments with snow. Switzerland − March 2002 (IMO Int. Rep. 03023, 2003, authors K. M. Hákonardóttir, T. Jóhannesson, F /avalanches/imo/lab/
  • 16. 2013_001_Nawri_et_al

    values. For Part 2, data files describing the local wind statistics on the regular model grid covering Iceland are made available through an online wind atlas (follow the link from http://www.vedur.is/vedur/vedurfar/vindorka/). The files contain estimates of Weibull parameters at each grid point, for twelve wind direction sectors, five heights (10, 25, 50, 100, 200 m above ground level (mAGL /media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2013/2013_001_Nawri_et_al.pdf
  • 17. IPPC-2007-ar4_syr

    of different country groupings in 2004. The percentages in the bars in both panels indicate a region’s share in global GHG emissions. {WGIII Figures SPM.3a, SPM.3b} Regional distribution of GHG emissions by population and by GDPPPP and M&Tand M& T sectoral sources of GHGs in 2004 are considered in Figure 2.1c. {WGIII 1.3, SPM} The effect on global emissions of the decrease in global energy intensity /media/loftslag/IPPC-2007-ar4_syr.pdf
  • 18. 2005EO260001

    caldera covered by 150- to 250-m-thick ice (Figure 1). Its highest peak, Grímsfjall, on the southern caldera rim, reaches an elevation of 1722 m. Volcanic eruptions there, numbering several per century, are phreatomagmatic because of the ice cover, and they usually persist for days to weeks. Geothermal activity continu- ously melts the overlying ice, and meltwater accumulates in a subglacial /media/jar/myndsafn/2005EO260001.pdf
  • 19. Reykholt-abstracts

    ................................................................................................................... 8 Liss M. Andreassen, Hallgeir Elvehøy, Sindre Engh and Bjarne Kjøllmoen ..................... 9 Lidar measurements of Norwegian glaciers – an overview Neil Arnold* and Gareth Rees .............................................................................................. 10 Calculation of glacier velocity from repeat /media/vatnafar/joklar/Reykholt-abstracts.pdf
  • 20. Huntjens_etal-2010-Climate-change-adaptation-Reg_Env_Change

    at the operational/local level. A calibrated approach (standardized questionnaires and interviews, expert judgment, and reinterpretation of out- comes by means of relevant literature) was used to com- pare the state of affairs in water management in the selected case-studies. Adaptive and integrated water management Given the expected increase of climate-related extreme events, water governance capabilities /media/loftslag/Huntjens_etal-2010-Climate-change-adaptation-Reg_Env_Change.pdf

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