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Water flowing through veins along 3-grain intersections enlarges veins, forming conduits. At depth, the conduits are likely normal to equipotential planes that dip upglacier at ~11-times the slope of the glacier surface.Along the bed, the water flows normal to the intersection of the equipotential planes with the bed. Basal conduits are likely broad and low. Their size reflects a balance between melting by energy dissipated by the flowing water and closure due to pressure in the ice that slightly exceeds that in the water. In a steady state, water pressure in these conduits decreases with increasing discharge, leading to an arborescent drainage network. Water at the bed also moves through a distributed drainage system consisting of cavities linked by small conduits. In this system, water pressure may increase with discharge. Water pressures building up in this system may lead to surges. Conduits on till are more complicated because conduit shape is adjusted to provide a sediment transport rate equal to the rate of sediment supply. Near the glacier margin, sediment deposited in subglacial conduits may form eskers. Tunnel valleys form when subglacial lakes drain catastrophically.
This chapter describes the key elements of volcanic disaster planning for health sector workers. A simplified way to approach volcanoes and their hazards is to learn whether they are mainly explosive or effusive (a nonexplosive outpouring of fluid lava) in behavior. The main eruptive hazards can be divided into fall and flow processes. Pyroclastic flows and surges, lahars and debris flows, and lava flows can, for emergency planning purposes, be envisaged by thinking visually or intuitively, but their behavior belongs to the world of flow, or fluid dynamics, on which the understanding of the blood circulation, meteorology, and aeronautics is based. Although mitigation of human casualties by timely evacuation is the main goal in emergency management of volcanic threats, disaster planners must also be familiar with rescue and emergency treatment measures and prepare for unique conditions associated with volcanic eruptions.
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