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Featured researches published by Stefanie B. Wirth.


Archive | 2013

Lake Sediments as Archives of Recurrence Rates and Intensities of Past Flood Events

Adrian Gilli; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Lukas Glur; Stefanie B. Wirth

Palaeoflood hydrology is an expanding field as the damage potential of flood and flood-related processes are increasing with the population density and the value of the infrastructure. Assessing the risk of these hazards in mountainous terrain requires knowledge about the frequency and severness of such events in the past. A wide range of methods is employed using diverse biologic, geomorphic or geologic evidences to track past flood events. Impact of floods are studied and dated on alluvial fans and cones using for example the growth disturbance of trees (Stoffel and Bollschweiler 2008; Schneuwly-Bollschweiler and Stoffel 2012: this volume) or stratigraphic layers deposited by debris flows, allowing to reconstruct past flood frequencies (Bardou et~al. 2003). Further downstream, the classical approach of palaeoflood hydrology (Kochel and Baker 1982) utilizes geomorphic indicators such as overbank sediments, silt lines and erosion features of floods along a river (e.g. Benito and Thorndycraft 2005). Fine-grained sediment settles out of the river suspension in eddies or backwater areas, where the flow velocity of the river is reduced. Records of these deposits at different elevations across a river’s profile can be used to assess the discharge of the past floods. This approach of palaeoflood hydrology studies was successfully applied in several river catchments (e.g. Ely et al. 1993; Macklin and Lewin 2003; O’Connor et al. 1994; Sheffer et al. 2003; Thorndycraft et al. 2005; Thorndycraft and Benito 2006). All these different reconstruction methods have their own advantages and disadvantages, but often these studies have a limited time coverage and the records are potentially incomplete due to lateral limits of depositional areas and due to the erosional power of fluvial processes that remove previously deposited flood witnesses. Here, we present a method that follows the sediment particle transported by a flood event to its final sink: the lacustrine basin.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Frequent floods in the European Alps coincide with cooler periods of the past 2500 years

Lukas Glur; Stefanie B. Wirth; Ulf Büntgen; Adrian Gilli; Gerald H. Haug; Christoph Schär; Jürg Beer; Flavio S. Anselmetti

Severe floods triggered by intense precipitation are among the most destructive natural hazards in Alpine environments, frequently causing large financial and societal damage. Potential enhanced flood occurrence due to global climate change would thus increase threat to settlements, infrastructure, and human lives in the affected regions. Yet, projections of intense precipitation exhibit major uncertainties and robust reconstructions of Alpine floods are limited to the instrumental and historical period. Here we present a 2500-year long flood reconstruction for the European Alps, based on dated sedimentary flood deposits from ten lakes in Switzerland. We show that periods with high flood frequency coincide with cool summer temperatures. This wet-cold synchronism suggests enhanced flood occurrence to be triggered by latitudinal shifts of Atlantic and Mediterranean storm tracks. This paleoclimatic perspective reveals natural analogues for varying climate conditions, and thus can contribute to a better understanding and improved projections of weather extremes under climate change.


Geobiology | 2012

Development of a real-time PCR method for the detection of fossil 16S rDNA fragments of phototrophic sulfur bacteria in the sediments of Lake Cadagno

Damiana Ravasi; Sandro Peduzzi; Valeria Guidi; Raffaele Peduzzi; Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Mauro Tonolla

Lake Cadagno is a crenogenic meromictic lake situated in the southern range of the Swiss Alps characterized by a compact chemocline that has been the object of many ecological studies. The population dynamics of phototrophic sulfur bacteria in the chemocline has been monitored since 1994 with molecular methods such as 16S rRNA gene clone library analysis. To reconstruct paleo-microbial community dynamics, we developed a quantitative real-time PCR methodology for specific detection of 16S rRNA gene sequences of purple and green sulfur bacteria populations from sediment samples. We detected fossil 16S rDNA of nine populations of phototrophic sulfur bacteria down to 9-m sediment depth, corresponding to about 9500 years of the lakes biogeological history. These results provide the first evidence for the presence of 16S rDNA of anoxygenic phototrophic bacteria in Holocene sediments of an alpine meromictic lake and indicate that the water column stratification and the bacterial plume were already present in Lake Cadagno thousands of years ago. The finding of Chlorobium clathratiforme remains in all the samples analyzed shows that this population, identified in the water column only in 2001, was already a part of the lakes biota in the past.


The Holocene | 2015

Alpine lacustrine varved record reveals summer temperature as main control of glacier fluctuations over the past 2250 years

Lukas Glur; Nadja Franziska Stalder; Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Flavio S. Anselmetti

Glacier fluctuations are a key indicator of changing climate. Their reconstruction beyond historical times unravels glacier variability and its forcing factors on long time scales, which can considerably improve our understanding of the climate–glacier relationship. Here, we present a 2250-year-long reconstruction of particle-mass accumulation rates recorded in the lacustrine sediments of Lake Trüebsee (Central Swiss Alps) that are directly related to glacier extent, thus reflecting a continuous record of fluctuations of the upstream-located Titlis Glacier. Mass accumulation rate values show strong centennial to multi-centennial fluctuations and reveal 12 well-pronounced periods of enhanced values corresponding to times of maximum extent of the neighboring Lower Grindelwald Glacier. This result supports previous studies of proglacial lake sediments that documented high mass accumulation rate values during glacier advances. The strong variability in the Lake Trüebsee mass accumulation rate record thus represents a highly sensitive paleoclimatic archive, which mirrors rapid and pronounced feedbacks of Titlis Glacier to climatic changes over the past 2250 years. The comparison of our data with independent paleo-temperature reconstructions from tree rings suggests that variations in mean summer temperature were the primary driving factor of fluctuations of Titlis Glacier. Also, advances of Titlis Glacier occurred during the grand solar minima (Dalton, Maunder, Spörer, Wolf) of the last millennium. This relation of glacier extent with summer temperature reveals strong evidence that the mass balance of this Alpine glacier is primarily controlled by the intensity of glacier melting during summer.


Climate of The Past Discussions | 2012

Multidisciplinary distinction of mass-movements and flood induced deposits in lacustrine environments : implications for Holocene palaeohydrology and associated natural hazards (Lake Ledro, Southern Alps, Italy)

Annaëlle Simonneau; Emmanuel Chapron; Boris Vannière; Stefanie B. Wirth; A. Gilli; Christian Di-Giovanni; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Marc Desmet; Michel Magny

A. Simonneau, E. Chapron, B. Vannière, S. B. Wirth, A. Gilli, C. Di Giovanni, F. S. Anselmetti, M. Desmet, and M. Magny ISTO, UMR7327, CNRS; Univ. Orléans; BRGM, 1A rue de la Férollerie, 45071 Orléans Cedex 2, France Laboratoire de Chrono-Environnement, UMR6249, CNRS; UFR des Sciences et Techniques, 16 route de Gray, 25030 Besançon, France Geological Institute, ETH Zurich, Sonneggstrasse 5, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland Eawag, Department of Surface Waters, Überlandstrasse 133, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland 3205


Climate of The Past | 2013

North–south palaeohydrological contrasts in the central Mediterranean during the Holocene: tentative synthesis and working hypotheses

Michel Magny; Nathalie Combourieu-Nebout; J.-L. de Beaulieu; Viviane Bout-Roumazeilles; Daniele Colombaroli; Stéphanie Desprat; Alexander Francke; Sébastien Joannin; Elena Ortu; Odile Peyron; Marie Revel; Laura Sadori; Giuseppe Siani; Marie-Alexandrine Sicre; Stéphanie Samartin; Anaëlle Simonneau; Willy Tinner; Boris Vannière; Bernd Wagner; Giovanni Zanchetta; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Elisabetta Brugiapaglia; Emmanuel Chapron; M. Debret; Marc Desmet; Julien Didier; L. Essallami; Didier Galop; Adrian Gilli; Jean Nicolas Haas


Quaternary Science Reviews | 2013

Holocene flood frequency across the Central Alps - solar forcing and evidence for variations in North Atlantic atmospheric circulation

Stefanie B. Wirth; Lukas Glur; Adrian Gilli; Flavio S. Anselmetti


Climate of The Past | 2011

Bacterial GDGTs in Holocene sediments and catchment soils of a high Alpine lake: application of the MBT/CBT-paleothermometer

Helge Niemann; Alina Stadnitskaia; Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Flavio S. Anselmetti; J.S. Sinninghe Damsté; Stefan Schouten; Ellen C. Hopmans; Moritz F. Lehmann


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

A 2000 year long seasonal record of floods in the southern European Alps

Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Anaëlle Simonneau; Daniel Ariztegui; Boris Vannière; Lukas Glur; Emmanuel Chapron; Michel Magny; Flavio S. Anselmetti


Climate of The Past | 2013

Mass-movement and flood-induced deposits in Lake Ledro, southern Alps, Italy: implications for Holocene palaeohydrology and natural hazards

Anaëlle Simonneau; Emmanuel Chapron; Boris Vannière; Stefanie B. Wirth; Adrian Gilli; Christian Di-Giovanni; Flavio S. Anselmetti; Marc Desmet; Michel Magny

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Lukas Glur

Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology

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Boris Vannière

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Michel Magny

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Marc Desmet

François Rabelais University

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A. Gilli

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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