Oral Programme GM4.1

GM4.1

Geomorphic response to environmental change
Co-Conveners: Simon Armitage , Ian Candy , Gilles Erkens , Gerard Govers , Thomas Hoffmann , Olav Slaymaker 
Oral Programme
 / Tue, 04 May, 08:30–12:00  / 13:30–15:00  / Room 21
Poster Programme
 / Attendance Tue, 04 May, 17:30–19:00  / Hall XL

Tuesday, 4 May 2010
Room 21
Chairperson: Simon Armitage & Ian Candy
Quaternary Geomorphology and Environmental Change

08:30–08:45
EGU2010-2916
The Quaternary of the British Isles: factors forcing environmental change (solicited)
James Rose
08:45–09:00
EGU2010-11635
Erosion and filling of glacially-overdeepened troughs in the Northern Alpine Foreland as recorded in a deep drill core from Northern Switzerland
Andreas Dehnert, Hans Axel Kemna, Flavio Anselmetti, Ruth Drescher-Schneider, Hans Rudolf Graf, Sally Lowick, Frank Preusser, Andreas Züger, and Heinz Furrer
09:00–09:15
EGU2010-14081
Quaternary palaeoenvironments in Namibia: new records from optically stimulated dating of Kalahari linear dune accumulation and northern Namib Sand Sea interdune deposits.
Abigail Stone, David Thomas, Heather Viles, and Richard Bailey
09:15–09:30
EGU2010-9652
Coupling records of fluvial activity from the last interglacial-glacial cycle with climate forcing using both geochronology and numerical modelling
Rebecca Briant, Gareth Mottram, and John Wainwright
09:30–09:45
EGU2010-6072
Landscape sensitivity to short and long term climate change during the Late Quaternary: Southern Spain
Claire Gallant, Ian Candy, and Simon Armitage
09:45–10:00
EGU2010-7113
Quantifying geomorphological response to climate change by "unmixing" of lake sediments from Lake Donggi Cona, north-eastern Tibetan Plateau, China
Elisabeth Dietze, Kai Hartmann, Bernd Wünnemann, Bernhard Diekmann, Andreas Borchers, Janneke IJmker, Georg Stauch, Frank Lehmkuhl, and Stephan Opitz
COFFEE BREAK
Land-use and Climate Impacts on Fluvial Systems

10:30–10:45
EGU2010-834
River systems: basin-scale responses to human and climate forcing (solicited)
Richard Chiverrell
10:45–11:00
EGU2010-3514
Unravelling Late Pleistocene and Holocene landscape dynamics: The Upper Guadalentín Basin, SE Spain
Jantiene E.M. Baartman, Tom (A.) Veldkamp, Jeroen M. Schoorl, Jakob Wallinga, and Erik (L.H.) Cammeraat
11:00–11:15
EGU2010-14615
Deciphering the anthropogenic Holocene floodplain sedimentation rate increases from natural bias
Jane Willenbring, Friedhelm von Blanckenburg, and Thomas Hoffmann
11:15–11:30
EGU2010-3091
Sediment budgets of mountain catchments: Scale dependence and the influence of land-use
Helga Förster, Markus Dotterweich, and Jürgen Wunderlich
11:30–11:45
EGU2010-4873
Modeling the impacts of climate changes and anthropogenic land use on fluvial and sediment dynamics in the Dijle catchment during the Holocene
Bastiaan Notebaert, Gert Verstraeten, Philip Ward, Anton Van Rompaey, Iris Peeters, Jean Poesen, Gerard Govers, and hans Renssen
11:45–12:00
EGU2010-13352
The importance of soil properties for understanding historical environmental change in contrasting environments: a field and modelling approach
Bert Dusar, Bastiaan Notebaert, and Gert Verstraeten
LUNCH BREAK
The Recent Past and Future Perspectives

13:30–13:45
EGU2010-2169
Changes and trends in debris-flow frequency since A.D. 1850 - results from the Swiss Alps
Michelle Bollschweiler and Markus Stoffel
13:45–14:00
EGU2010-5480
Understanding the Effects of Sea-Level Rise on Coastal Wetlands: The Human Dimension
Denise Reed
14:00–14:15
EGU2010-3189
Human geomorphic footprint and global geomorphic change: implications for hydrogeomorphic hazards
JUAN REMONDO and the CAMGEO
14:15–14:30
EGU2010-3716
Linking soil profile formation and landscape development with a quantitative mechanistic model
Tom Vanwalleghem, Misnasny Budiman, and Alex McBratney
14:30–14:45
EGU2010-9511
An hypothesis for integrating climate, geomorphology, soils, and land use for interpreting runoff and erosion in catchment management studies, Central Queensland, Australia
Cyril Ciesiolka
14:45–15:00
EGU2010-1171
Geomorphology and the consequences of global climate change (solicited)
Thomas Spencer