Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.

Heuristic method for landslide susceptibility assessment in the Messina municipality

TitleHeuristic method for landslide susceptibility assessment in the Messina municipality
Publication TypeMonografia
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsLeoni, G., Campolo D., Falconi Luca, Gioè C., Lumaca S., Puglisi Claudio, and Torre A.
Series TitleEngineering Geology for Society and Territory - Volume 2: Landslide Processes
Number of Pages501-504
PublisherSpringer International Publishing
KeywordsDynamical characteristics, Field surveys, geographic information systems, hazard assessment, Heuristic methods, Landslide inventories, Landslide susceptibility, Landslide susceptibility assessments, Landslides, Maps, Predisposing factors, Rain, Risk assessment, Slope protection, Surveys, Susceptibility analysis
Abstract

October 1st 2009 a heavy rainfall caused more than one thousand debris flows in two small basins south of Messina town (North–East Sicily, Italy). After the disaster Messina Municipality entrusted the risk assessment of its whole territory to a geomorphology and GIS team, led by ENEA, that applied and improved a heuristic method aimed at the identification of the areas prone to landslide triggering, based on the recognition of physical and dynamical characteristics of phenomena. This landslide susceptibility method is a GIS based process that consists in four steps: Field Survey, Site Analysis, Macro-Area Analysis and Susceptibility Analysis. Through the Field Survey of natural and anthropic conditions of past and recent phenomena a landslide inventory is generated, and each thematic map is stored in a GIS database. In the Site Analysis a univariate statistical analysis of the inventory leads to classify each causative factor as a discriminating parameter (condition necessary for slope instability) or as a pr edisposing factor (condition that works together in worsening slope stability). In the Macro-Area Analysis the GIS overlay of all thematic maps is performed to recognize, in surrounding areas, features similar to those of past events. Finally a susceptibility function runs the weighted sum of Predisposing Factors in zones where all Discriminating Parameters are present, deriving the Susceptibility Map. The here discussed heuristic GIS method allows the integration of multidisciplinary knowledge, both quantitative and qualitative, thus exploiting field experience. . © Springer International Publishing Switzerland 2015.

URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84944586072&doi=10.1007%2f978-3-319-09057-3_82&partnerID=40&md5=c69c4bf6bfb6b9af0ef5b1191951c2a3
DOI10.1007/978-3-319-09057-3_82
Citation KeyLeoni2015501