Monitoring and prediction of InSAR-derived post-seismic hillslope deformation rates

Autor: Hakan Tanyas, Kun He, Nitheshnirmal Sadhasivam, Luigi Lombardo, Ling Chang, Zhice Fang, Ashok Dahal, Islam Fadel, Xiewen Hu, Gang Luo
Přispěvatelé: Department of Applied Earth Sciences, UT-I-ITC-4DEarth, Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation, Digital Society Institute, Department of Earth Observation Science, UT-I-ITC-ACQUAL
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2023
Zdroj: EGU General Assembly 2023
Popis: Strong earthquakes not only induce co-seismic mass wasting but also exacerbates the shear strength of hillslope materials and cause higher landslide susceptibility in the subsequent years following the earthquake. Previous studies have mainly investigated post-seismic landslide activity mainly by using landslide inventories. However, landslide inventories do not provide information on deformation given by ground shaking and limit our observations to only failed hillslopes. As a consequence, we lack comprehensive, quantitative analysis revealing how hillslopes behave in post- seismic periods. Satellite-based synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) could fill this gap and provide millimeter-scale measurements of ground surface displacements that can be used to monitor hillslope deformation.InSAR also provides a rich dataset to put shed light on spatiotemporal patterns of hillslope deformation, which are influenced by a combination of static and dynamic environmental characteristics specific to any landscape of interest. However, these influences are yet to be explored and exploited to train data-driven models and make predictions on the deformation one may expect in space or time.Here we use the Persistent Scatterer Interferometry technique to monitor pre- and post- seismic hillslope deformations for the area affected by the 2017 Mw 6.9 Nyingchi, China earthquake that occurred on the 2017 18th of November 2017 earthquake. We use Sentinel-1 satellite data acquired between 2016 and 2022 to examine post-seismic hillslope evolution. Using the same dataset, we also explore developing an interpretable multivariate model dedicated to InSAR-derived hillslope deformationsOur results show that the average post-seismic hillslope deformation level in the study area is still higher than its pre-seismic counterpart approximately four and a half years after the earthquake. As for the multivariate model dedicated to InSAR-derived deformation data, the results we obtain are promising for we suitably retrieved the signal of environmental predictors, from which we then estimated the mean line of sight velocities for a number of hillslopes affected by seismic shaking.
Databáze: OpenAIRE