Mass flows and snow thickness maps at Mount Cleveland from DEMs

Published: 22 October 2021| Version 2 | DOI: 10.17632/s7cb949r3w.2
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Description

These data are the results in a paper entitled "Quantifying surface height changes at Mt. Cleveland, Alaska between 2001 and 2020 using satellite photogrammetry" submitted to EPSL in 2021. It includes the 2-m resolution surface elevation change and uncertainty maps for the 2001 Cleveland eruption (Fig. 1a in the paper), the 2-m resolution surface elevation change, and uncertainty maps corresponding to the accumulative changes of the following three eruptions: February 3, 2017, to January 20, 2019 eruption, the November 7 to November 15, 2019 eruption, and the June 1, 2020 eruption (Fig. 2a). This also includes the inferred snow thickness map in June 2018 (Fig. 4a). This data set also includes the boundary of the deposit field, the boundary of mass loss, and the boundary of snow. Here we also share the digitized outlines from mass flows in previously published material (e.g., Smith (2005) and an image from the Alaska Volcano Observatory). The GeoTIFF files can be viewed in free and open-source software QGIS, in Google Earth, or by Matlab using code https://github.com/ihowat/setsm_postprocessing/blob/master/readGeotiff.m. The shapefiles can be viewed in QGIS. Google Earth may not show some of the shapefiles well. Smith, S.J., 2005. Chronologic multisensor assessment for Mount Cleveland, Alaska from 2000 to 2004 focusing on the 2001 eruption (Doctoral dissertation).

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Institutions

Louisiana State University

Categories

Volcanology, Cryosphere

Funding

NASA Earth Surface and Interior Program Grant 80NSSC20K0491

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