
Professor Jeremy Phillips
B.Sc., M.Phil.(Birm.), Ph.D.(Birmingham)
Current positions
Professor of Volcanology and Natural Hazards
School of Earth Sciences
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
I am a physical volcanologist with broad interest in environmental hazard, risk and resilience. My physical science background is in fluid dynamics and volcanic processes, including fundamental processes of explosive volcanic eruptions, and multiphase environmental flows including volcanic ash transport, and dynamics of suspensions and granular flows. My main career focus has been the prediction of volcanic hazards and their impacts, including volcanic ash transport, lahars and landslides, volcanic gases and crater lakes. I now work across disciplines to integrate hazard assessment with social and physical vulnerability, risk management structures and community engagement, with social scientists, engineers, mathematicians and statisticians. A current focus is cascading hazard impacts including volcanic ash impacts on agricultural communities and infrastructure, and hydrometeorological hazards including lahars and sediment-charged floods, working in collaboration with academic social scientists, community artists and in-country hazard prediction and risk management agencies.
My ongoing and recent multidisciplinary projects include ‘Strengthening Resilience in Volcanic Areas’ (STREVA; NERC-ESRC NE/J019984/1) for which I am Bristol Principal Investigator, leader of the hazard assessment workpackage and country contact with Ecuador, ‘Crossing Borders and Costing Livelihoods; The Unbearable Heaviness of Volcanic Ash’, NERC International Opportunities Fund, NE/M017621/1 (Co-Investigator) and ‘Harnessing 'citizen science' to reinforce resilience to environmental disasters: creating an evidence base and community of practice' NE/P016014/1 NERC/ESRC/AHRC 'Bulding Resilience' GCRF funding (Co-Investigator). Core elements of these projects have been the development of freely-available hazard assessment tools for volcanic plumes (plumerise.bristol.ac.uk) and lahar hazard (laharflow.bristol.ac.uk) and in-country workshops with communities and stakeholders. In a development context I have ongoing research collaborations with Colombia, Ecuador, St Vincent and the Grenadines, and China, and developing relationships in Peru and DPRK.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Tomorrow's Cities Phase 4 Funding
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
01/04/2024 to 30/09/2024
Dynamic risk for cascading Himalayan hazards
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
14/02/2024 to 13/02/2028
Tomorrow's Cities Phase 3 Funding
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
School of Earth SciencesDates
01/04/2023 to 31/03/2024
Thesis supervisions
Dynamics and Modelling of the 2015 Calbuco eruption Volcanic Debris Flows (Chile). From field evidence to a primary lahar model
Supervisors
The degassing of basaltic magma chambers
Supervisors
Explosive Volcanic Eruptions on Ice
Supervisors
Integrated modelling of slope hydrology and stability hazards to explore the potential effects of land use and climate change on dynamic multi-hazard interactions
Supervisors
Sponge Diversity and Distribution in the Labrador Sea
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
16/03/2025Incorporating Eruption Source Parameter and Meteorological Variability in the Generation of Probabilistic Volcanic Ash Hazard Forecasts
Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
Heat transfer in pyroclastic density current‐ice interactions
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Numerical simulation of long-distance debris flows (lahars) on glacier-clad volcanoes
Frontiers in Earth Science
Reflexivity and interdisciplinarity
Disaster Prevention and Management
Quantifying uncertainty in probabilistic volcanic ash hazard forecasts, with an application to weather pattern based wind field sampling
Bulletin of Volcanology