Lin Way
lway9.bsky.social
Lin Way
@lway9.bsky.social
PhD researcher studying volcanoes 🌋 •• remote sensing and models 🛰️ ••
Uni of Bristol UK 🇬🇧 | previously at EOS-Remote Sensing Lab SG disaster response 🇸🇬
Reposted by Lin Way
🌟OPEN ACCESS🌟🔥PRESS RELEASE🔥In a new #TSR paper, scientists found direct visual evidence for curved fault slip. ⚒️

Press Release: www.seismosoc.org/news/curved-...

Paper: pubs.geoscienceworld.org/ssa/tsr/arti...

Video: youtu.be/dbEYe65eDdw
Curved Fault Slip Captured on CCTV During Myanmar Earthquake | Seismological Society of America
18 July 2025—Dramatic CCTV video of fault slip during a recent large earthquake in Myanmar thrilled both scientists and casual observers when it was posted to YouTube. But it was on his fifth or…
www.seismosoc.org
July 22, 2025 at 11:01 PM
Reposted by Lin Way
Most of the University of Bristol Volcanology Research group finishing up a VERY hot week in Geneva for the #IAVCEI2025 @iavcei.bsky.social conference - the biggest gathering of volcanologists in the world every few years! Well done team! 👏🏼 🌋
July 4, 2025 at 4:00 PM
Reposted by Lin Way
New in @science.org: Natural hazards aren’t “one and done.” They alter the landscape, changing the likelihood of follow-on events. We argue there’s an urgent opportunity for geomorphologists—working with other disciplines—to better understand and forecast cascading hazards.
Cascading land surface hazards as a nexus in the Earth system
This Review synthesizes progress and outlines a new framework for understanding how land surface hazards interact and propagate as sediment cascades across Earth’s surface, influenced by interactions ...
www.science.org
June 26, 2025 at 6:22 PM
Reposted by Lin Way
If anyone wants to hear me and my observatory's monitoring chief talk California volcanoes, this week's NSPR Blue Dot podcast is out! 🧪⚒️🌋

Blue Dot: The Golden State's volcanic legacy: The USGS California Volcano Observatory | NSPR share.google/mko4KMElJXsU...
Blue Dot: The golden state's volcanic legacy: The USGS California Volcano Observatory
Host Dave Schlom discusses one of his favorite topics, California's volcanoes, with two United States Geological Survey staff members from the USGS California Volcano Observatory based at Moffett Fiel...
share.google
June 14, 2025 at 12:08 AM
Reposted by Lin Way
Between 1975 and 1984, enough lava was erupted from a fissure at Krafla volcano 🌋 in Iceland 🇮🇸 to cover an area of 36 km2
@kkamalpha.bsky.social for scale.
June 14, 2025 at 8:24 AM