About the Journal
GeoPatterns was founded in 2016 and it is supported and promoted by the the Center for Risk Studies, Spatial Modelling, Terrestrial and Coastal System Dynamics, Department of Geomorphology, Faculty of Geography, University of Bucharest. GeoPatterns publishes mainly original, high quality, peer-reviewed (DOI-assigned) research papers in all fields of spatially integrated geosciences and humanities, as well as reviews, research notes, and reports. The aim of GeoPatterns is to build a framework for the holistic understanding of our planet and its natural and social environments, by identifying the patterns that sustain the world.
All scientific papers accepted for publication are thoroughly analysed by a scientific committee formed by Romanian and foreign university professors, internationally recognized in their area of expertise.
GeoPatterns’s topics coverage makes the journal essential reading for geographers, as well as for researchers from other disciplines, such as disaster management, ecology, geology, sociology, psychology, anthropology (links nature and culture), environmental studies, urban planning, and cultural studies. The main language of the journal is English.
GeoPatterns is an open access journal and the content of the journal is freely available immediately upon publication.
Current Issue
GeoPatterns’s topics coverage makes the journal essential reading for geographers, as well as for researchers from other disciplines, such as disaster management, ecology, geology, sociology, psychology, anthropology (links nature and culture), environmental studies, urban planning, and cultural studies. The main language of the journal is English.
Full Issue
Articles
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Identifying optimal locations for mobile first aid facilities in Bucharest, accounting for seismic risk
Abstract
In case of a major earthquake in the Vrancea area, Bucharest can be significantly affected (as it happened in 1940 and 1977). As highlighted by these events, the need for establishing mobile first aid facilities close to affected areas (deployment of medical containers or mobile hospitals) is expected to be of high importance for saving lives. In this research we identify the need of such
facilities and the favorable locations, considering multiple earthquake scenarios. Our methodology is based on multicriteria analysis in which we use the SMCE module of the ILWIS geospatial program and take into account three indicators: (i) the estimated losses in terms of affected residential buildings and occupants, calculated for 3 earthquake scenarios, (ii) distances from buildings with high
seismic risk levels (categories I and II) and from important traffic routes, and (iii) road network connectivity loss after a major earthquake. The results identified the central and peripheral area as having complex issues and the need for future analyzes at the neighborhood level. -
A short review and selection of soil erosion models
Abstract
The article gives a brief review of the related literature concerning soil erosion by surface water flow and provides an outline of several currently available models. They are analyzed in terms of their model structure and spatial and temporal resolution. The focus was on selecting a number of three model approaches that potentially could be applied to the upper and middle sectors of the
Prahova River Valley. -
InSAR digital terrain models for mining areas based on Sentinel-1 imagery. A case study in Căliman area InSAR digital terrain models for mining areas based on Sentinel-1 imagery. A case study in Căliman area
Abstract
Although not intended at first, SAR satellite technology has been used for digital terrain models (DTM) generation and displacement monitoring for the last 30 years starting with the launch of the first RADAR imaging satellite by the European Spatial Agency (ESA), ERS-1. Currently, there is a suite of satellites available for these applications, with ESA’s Sentinel-1 being one of the most accessible and exploited by scientists due to its wide and free of costs availability. The C-band repeatpass interferometer is considered unsuitable for DTM generation due to its acquisition geometry. In this study, a DTM based on Sentinel-1 imagery for the former sulphur quarry mine in Căliman Mountains is derived in order to demonstrate the potential of the dataset for time and cost effective
monitoring of large areas. -
Bucharest Drivers’ Perception of Navigation Apps and their Impact on Road Traffic
Abstract
Bucharest is one of the most affected cities in the world in terms of road traffic congestion and under these conditions, drivers are constantly looking for new strategies to help them cope with daily traffic. They are increasingly relying on more on navigation applications installed in their smartphones with GPS capabilities. This research aims to investigate drivers’ perception of the way
they use navigation applications and their purpose, especially Waze, their perception of the impact of these applications on traffic and the city or even on socialization (socialization through the application or the socializing effects of the application itself). The study conducted in 2018 reveals the positive perception of the impact that the application has and highlights its new affordance, drivers using it as a socialization tool, a utility that was not initially intended. -
P. Krugman’s Core-Periphery Model. Case Study: The Tourist Demand on the Romanian Seaside
Abstract
Krugman's model is a new approach for Romania, even more applied to the Black Sea seaside. The tourist demand in such a way reveals the relations not only economic, but also of another nature between the core and the periphery. The data clearly show that this model is a forceful one, applicable not only to the Romanian seaside, but also to the region, country or continent, and its study
can reveal very interesting conclusions: the influence of the core on the periphery, how the North and the South interact in the chosen model and how seasonality affects seaside tourism. -
Review of Geodiversity and Geoheritage related sessions at the European Geosciences Union General Assemblies
Abstract
Sessions related to geoheritage have been held under different convenorships and titles since 2012 at the European Geosciences Union General Assembly in Vienna. 2020 was a special year, since the session was held online. The author participated with a contribution in 2019 and without one in 2020, and it was an occasion to compare a physical session with oral and poster presentations and a splinter meeting to a digital session.
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Report from the first workshop of International Permafrost Association Action Group Rock glaciers inventories and kinematics
Abstract
The recent initiative to standardize the mapping and monitoring of rock glaciers around the world resulted in the organization of the First Workshop of the Action Group Rock glaciers inventories and kinematics, in Evolene, Switzerland. The participants focused to discuss in detail and debate several issues to be introduced in a new version of a guidelines document regarding rock glaciers inventorying. This paper discusses the development of the field trips and working sessions of the workshop.