Debris flow and debris flood hazard assessment in mountain catchments

被引:0
|
作者
Baggio, Tommaso [1 ]
Martini, Marco [1 ]
Bettella, Francesco [1 ]
D'Agostino, Vincenzo [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Padua, Dept Land Environm Agr & Forestry, Viale Univ 16, I-35020 Legnaro, PD, Italy
关键词
Debris flow; Debris flood; Hazard assessment; Residual hazard; RAINFALL-INDUCED LANDSLIDES; LARGE WOOD RECRUITMENT; SEDIMENT SOURCE AREAS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; CHECK DAMS; HEADWATER STREAMS; FLASH FLOODS; PART; RISK; INITIATION;
D O I
10.1016/j.catena.2024.108338
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Debris flow and debris flood phenomena threat the life of thousands of citizens living in mountain areas and endanger buildings and infrastructure worldwide. The assessment of the probable magnitude of these events is a key process in hazard mapping and the research community has been improving their comprehension of this topic in the last decades and consequently the capacity to predict the impacts of such events. The study analyses the current state of the art for hazard mapping and it pays particular attention to the concept of residual hazard. Through an extensive analysis of events that caused major damages, processes, factors and basin conditions, which are strictly related to debris flow and debris flood events, are investigated in order to improve the hazardmapping reliability. Drawing from a thorough analysis of the literature and four complex events directly investigated, the study proposes a procedural framework to develop more reliable sets of possible scenarios for hazard mapping. The developed methodology proposes to include in the hazard assessment of mountain catchments (i) exogenous forces (climatic forces, natural and anthropic disturbances), (ii) alteration of the system condition (countermeasures malfunctions/failure and bed/banks erosion) and (iii) flow type variation (spatial and temporal variation of the flow and change in transport typology). The result is a perspective hazard map that takes in account all these factors and processes together with an estimation of their mid-long term evolution, accounting for climate change conditions. Here, future catchment responses are incorporated in a global catchment view, which allows the prediction of seemingly infrequent processes that are sometimes not rare for certain mountain basins. The proposed framework aims to assist practitioners and civil authorities in better defining the hazard classes for a given area thereby reducing uncertainty related to possible debris flow and debris flood events.
引用
收藏
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Using morphometrics to distinguish between debris flow, debris flood and flood (Southern Carpathians, Romania)
    Ilinca, Viorel
    [J]. CATENA, 2021, 197
  • [42] Hazard assessment of debris flow in Guangxi, China based on hydrodynamics mechanism
    Daming Li
    Hongqiang Zhang
    Yanqing Li
    Zhu Zhen
    Shilong Bu
    Xingchen Tang
    Shuo Chen
    Shan Luo
    Shunfa Tian
    Mingming Xiong
    [J]. Environmental Earth Sciences, 2019, 78
  • [43] A simplified numerical model for debris-flow hazard assessment: DEFLIMO
    Lenzi, MA
    D'Agostino, V
    Gregoretti, C
    Sonda, D
    [J]. DEBRIS-FLOW HAZARDS MITIGATION: MECHANICS, PREDICTION, AND ASSESSMENT, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2003, : 611 - 622
  • [44] UAV Remote Sensing Hazard Assessment in Zhouqu Debris Flow Disaster
    Wen, Qi
    He, Haixia
    Wang, Xufeng
    Wu, Wei
    Wang, Lei
    Xu, Feng
    Wang, Ping
    Tang, Tong
    Lei, Yu
    [J]. REMOTE SENSING OF THE OCEAN, SEA ICE, COASTAL WATERS, AND LARGE WATER REGIONS 2011, 2011, 8175
  • [45] Geoscience and geotechnical engineering aspects of debris-flow hazard assessment
    Dietrich, WE
    Sitar, N
    [J]. DEBRIS-FLOW HAZARDS MITIGATION: MECHANICS, PREDICTION & ASSESSMENT, 1997, : 656 - 676
  • [46] Study on methodology and application of debris-flow hazard risk assessment
    Han, Y. S.
    Cui, P.
    Liu, H. J.
    Ge, Y. G.
    Su, F. H.
    Tan, R. Z.
    [J]. DEBRIS-FLOW HAZARDS MITIGATION: MECHANICS, PREDICTION, AND ASSESSMENT, 2007, : 399 - +
  • [47] Topographic signature of debris flow dominated channels: implications for hazard assessment
    Santos, R.
    Duarte, R. Menendez
    [J]. MONITORING, SIMULATION, PREVENTION AND REMEDIATION OF DENSE AND DEBRIS FLOWS, 2006, 90 : 301 - +
  • [48] Debris flow hazard assessment by combining numerical simulation and land utilization
    Jun Wang
    Shun Yang
    Guoqiang Ou
    Qinghua Gong
    Shaoxiong Yuan
    [J]. Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment, 2018, 77 : 13 - 27
  • [49] Evaluation of approaches to calculate debris-flow parameters for hazard assessment
    Hurlimann, Marcel
    Rickenmann, Dieter
    Medina, Vicente
    Bateman, Allen
    [J]. ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2008, 102 (3-4) : 152 - 163
  • [50] Debris flow hazard assessment by combining numerical simulation and land utilization
    Wang, Jun
    Yang, Shun
    Ou, Guoqiang
    Gong, Qinghua
    Yuan, Shaoxiong
    [J]. BULLETIN OF ENGINEERING GEOLOGY AND THE ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 77 (01) : 13 - 27