The Upper Middle Rhine Valley as a risk area

被引:5
|
作者
Grunert, Joerg [1 ]
Hess, Sigrid [1 ]
机构
[1] Johannes Gutenberg Univ Mainz, Dept Geog, Mainz, Germany
关键词
Historic flood hazards; Ice drift; Landslide risk;
D O I
10.1007/s11069-010-9661-z
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Upper Middle Rhine Valley, granted the status of a World Heritage site, is well known for its unique inner narrow valley of Quaternary age with its historical legacy of numerous medieval castles and old towns. Less known is that this has always been a risk area of floods and gravitative mass movements. Up to the recent past, mainly ice floods caused enormous damage. The inhabitants of the valley were well aware that they lived in a risk area, but they had learned to handle the flood hazard. With the demise of ice floods over the last 40 years, due to climate change and because of the additional heating of the river water by power plants, the awareness of flood hazards has been much diminished, in contrast to that of potential damage by rockfalls and landslides which were also much feared in the past, though at the local level only. Still in the people's memory is the Kaub catastrophe of March 10, 1876, when 28 persons were killed by a landslide. Nowadays, even minor rockfalls are a major threat, as they will affect the much-used traffic lines on both banks of the river, in particular the railroads. Therefore, since 2002, on behalf of German Rail (Deutsche Bahn, DB), all problematic slopes have been protected by costly steel-ring nets, although they are an aesthetic problem by UNESCO standards. The feeling of absolute safety created among the public is only subjective, though, as planners are well aware of. Moreover, the impact of modern climate change on slope stability is nearly unknown. Therefore, it is still necessary to develop a risk map for the narrow valley, with emphasis on gravitational hazards.
引用
收藏
页码:577 / 597
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] DISPERSAL OF MALE CODLING MOTHS (LASPEYRESIA POMONELLA L) IN UPPER RHINE VALLEY
    MANI, E
    WILDBOLZ, T
    ZEITSCHRIFT FUR ANGEWANDTE ENTOMOLOGIE-JOURNAL OF APPLIED ENTOMOLOGY, 1977, 83 (02): : 161 - 168
  • [42] Lidar surveys in the upper Rhine Valley new insights for archeological and landscape applications
    Basoge, Florian
    Koupaliantz, Laure
    Kreis, Nicolas
    Sittler, Benoît
    Revue Francaise de Photogrammetrie et de Teledetection, 2011, (193): : 53 - 60
  • [43] Isotope hydrological investigation on groundwater origin in the flood plain of the Upper Rhine Valley
    Königer, P
    Uhlenbrook, S
    Leibundgut, C
    Jaeger, L
    Mayer, H
    NEW APPROACHES CHARACTERIZING GROUNDWATER FLOW, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2001, : 363 - 366
  • [44] Influence of emission input data on ozone level predictions for the Upper Rhine Valley
    Schneider, C
    Kessler, C
    Moussiopoulos, N
    ATMOSPHERIC ENVIRONMENT, 1997, 31 (19) : 3187 - 3205
  • [45] A comparitive study of the hydrophyte flora from the Alpine Rhine to the Middle Rhine. Application to the conservation of the Upper Rhine aquatic ecosystems
    Vanderpoorten, A
    Klein, JP
    BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 1999, 87 (02) : 163 - 172
  • [46] LOESS OF THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI VALLEY DRIFTLESS AREA
    LEIGH, DS
    KNOX, JC
    QUATERNARY RESEARCH, 1994, 42 (01) : 30 - 40
  • [47] Risk management for floods: Case study Upper Rhine
    Plate, EJ
    ECLOGAE GEOLOGICAE HELVETIAE, 1997, 90 (03): : 449 - 456
  • [48] State and society in the early Middle-Ages: The Middle Rhine Valley, AD400-1000
    Goldberg, EJ
    SPECULUM-A JOURNAL OF MEDIEVAL STUDIES, 2003, 78 (01): : 208 - 209
  • [49] State and society in the early Middle-Ages. The middle Rhine valley AD400-1000
    Nelson, JL
    JOURNAL OF ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY, 2002, 53 (03): : 554 - 555
  • [50] State and society in the early Middle-Ages: The Middle Rhine Valley, AD400-1000
    Koziol, G
    CATHOLIC HISTORICAL REVIEW, 2002, 88 (01): : 105 - 106