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Florie Giacona

Researcher at University of Grenoble

Publications -  17
Citations -  485

Florie Giacona is an academic researcher from University of Grenoble. The author has contributed to research in topics: Climate change & Snow. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 10 publications receiving 283 citations. Previous affiliations of Florie Giacona include University of Geneva.

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Repenser les fondements du zonage règlementaire des risques en montagne « récurrents »

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose un changement de paradigme, i.e., le zonage y est envisage comme la un compromis entre les pertes dues au phenomene dommageable and les restrictions que la societe s'impose.
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One and a half century of avalanche risk to settlements in the upper Maurienne valley inferred from land cover and socio-environmental changes.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a holistic methodology combining land cover change detection using advanced image processing techniques, geohistorical investigations and qualitative modelling of risk changes in order to infer the evolution of avalanche risk and its drivers in the upper Maurienne (French Alps) from 1860 to 2017.
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Avalanche activity and socio-environmental changes leave strong footprints in forested landscapes: a case study in the Vosges medium-high mountain range

TL;DR: In this article, a geo-historical approach documents regular avalanche activity over more than 200 years on 13 paths in the Rothenbachkopf-Rainkopfa complex in the Vosges Mountains of Western Europe.
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Upslope migration of snow avalanches in a warming climate

TL;DR: In this article, the authors combine historical records and Bayesian techniques to construct a 240-y chronicle of snow avalanching in the Vosges Mountains (France) and show evidence that the transition from the late Little Ice Age to the early twentieth century (i.e., 1850 to 1920 CE) was not only characterized by local winter warming in the order of +1.35°C but also resulted in a more than sevenfold reduction in yearly avalanche numbers, a severe shrinkage of avalanche size, and shorter avalanche seasons as well as in a reduction of the