Correction to: Natural Hazards https://doi.org/10.1007/s11069-023-06135-2

Unfortunately in the original online version of this article's Figs. 1 and 2 were inadvertently shuffled during production process. The updated figures have been fixed with this correction.

Fig. 1
figure 1

The study area of Guttannen in the Grimsel valley. Top panel: the short, dashed arrow represents the debris flow trajectory, the long-dotted arrow the floods in the Aare river. The community center of Guttannen and the residential area of Boden are indicated. The white rectangle indicates the location of the two close-up images in the bottom panel. Image source: Swiss Federal Office of Topography swisstopo. Bottom panels: Close-up of parts of the flood area. Debris flows enter the Aare river channel from bottom left of the image and have deposited massive sediment in the riverbed over the past years, which can be easily recognized in a comparison of the two images (2007 representing conditions before the debris flow activity started). The white circle indicates the location of a building which was dismantled due to risk of flooding and people were relocated. Image sources: left: Flotron Perrin Jacquet, 2007; right: Swiss Federal Office of Topography swisstopo, 11/09/2018

Fig. 2
figure 2

(Top) Annual temperature anomalies from 1961–1990 for Northern Switzerland Alpine regions to which Guttannen and the Grimsel area belong. (Bottom) Mean annual maxima in mm of 5-day and 1-day precipitation (on the top row) and 1-h and 10-min (on the bottom row). Both figures are generated using data and tools available directly on the MeteoSwiss website and are from MeteoSwiss (CH2018 2018). The magenta arrow indicates the approximate location of measurement stations at Guttannen and Grimsel Ospice

The original article has been corrected.