Operational Monitoring of Volcanoes Using Keyhole Markup Language

Abstract

Volcanoes are some of the most geologically powerful, dynamic, visually appealing structures on the Earth's landscape. Volcanic eruptions are hard to predict, difficult to quantify and impossible to prevent, making effective monitoring a difficult proposition. In Alaska, volcanoes are an intrinsic part of the culture, with over 100 volcanoes and volcanic fields that have been active in historic time monitored by the Alaska Volcano Observatory (AVO). Observations and research are performed using a suite of methods and tools in the fields of remote sensing, seismology, geodesy and geology, producing large volumes of geospatial data. Keyhole Markup Language (KML) offers a context in which these different, and in the past disparate, data can be displayed simultaneously. Dynamic links keep these data current, allowing it to be used in an operational capacity. KML is used to display information from the aviation color codes and activity alert levels for volcanoes to locations of thermal anomalies, earthquake locations and ash plume modeling. The dynamic refresh and time primitive are used to display volcano webcam and satellite image overlays in near real-time. In addition a virtual globe browser using KML, such as Google Earth, provides an interface to further information using the hyperlink, rich-text and flash-embedding abilities supported within object description balloons. By merging these data sets in an easy to use interface, a virtual globe browser provides a better tool for scientists and emergency managers alike to mitigate volcanic crises.


Presentation

Poster
PDF (4 MB)

Authors

Jonathan Dehn (presenter)
Alaska Volcano Observatory, Geophysical Institute University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, AK 99775-7320, United States

John E Bailey
Arctic Region Supercomputing Center, 909 Koyukuk Drive University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK 99775, United States

Peter Webley
Arctic Region Supercomputing Center, 909 Koyukuk Drive University of Alaska, Fairbanks, AK 99775, United States


Links

Volcano Monitoring Using Google Earth
http://ge.images.alaska.edu/