Human impact on geomorphic processes and hazards in mountain areas in northern Spain

被引:59
|
作者
Remondo, J [1 ]
Soto, JS
González-Díez, A
de Terán, JRD
Cendrero, A
机构
[1] Univ Cantabria, DCITIMAC, E-39005 Santander, Spain
[2] Univ Cantabria, DCMQ, E-39005 Santander, Spain
关键词
landslide rates; denudation rates; relief evolution; landslide hazard assessment; human geomorphic influence; northern Spain;
D O I
10.1016/j.geomorph.2004.09.009
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
The temporal occurrence of slope movements, their contribution to relief evolution and human influence on those processes in two study areas of northern Spain are presented. The work is based on temporal analyses covering 100 ka in one study area and 43 years in the other. Temporal analysis has been the basis for quantitatively assessing the magnitude of human influence and developing landslide susceptibility and hazard models with known, independently-tested prediction capability. The results obtained in one study area show a relationship between landsliding periods and increasing precipitation during upper Pleistocene and Holocene. Significant increases of landslide frequency and mobilisation rate were also found around 5500 and 200 years ago. Those moments coincide with two periods of intensified human presence and activities: Neolithic and industrial revolutions. The increase observed represents about one order of magnitude from pre-Neolithic to present. A similar increase has been found between 1954 and 1997 in the other study area. The latter increase shows no relationship with changes in climate parameters or seismic activity. A fairly good correlation has been found between landslide frequency and socioeconomic indicators of human activity. Sedimentation rates in two neighbouring estuaries were determined and significant increases, particularly in the second part of last century, were also found. Evidence obtained suggest that the increases observed in the frequency of slope instability events (and therefore hazard), denudation and sedimentation rates are due to a greater extent to indirect geomorphologic changes caused by human action rather than climate change. Detailed analysis of landslide frequency during that 43-year period has also been used to produce and validate landslide susceptibility models and obtain landslide hazard maps with known prediction accuracy. Validation tests were carried out comparing susceptibility maps based on landslides that have occurred in the past with the ones occurring in several, later periods. Prediction capability of models could thus be determined. Validation of susceptibility maps using data derived from the temporal analysis of landslides was used to obtain hazard maps expressed as probability of new ruptures in a given time period, on the basis of past trends in terrain behaviour. Possible impacts of a growing influence of human activities on the terrain have been incorporated into the assessment of future hazards by considering different scenarios. (c) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:69 / 84
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Human topographic signatures and derived geomorphic processes across landscapes
    Tarolli, Paolo
    Sofia, Giulia
    [J]. GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2016, 255 : 140 - 161
  • [42] Historical geomorphic processes and human activities in the Central Spanish Pyrenees
    Garcia-Ruiz, JM
    Valero-Garces, BL
    [J]. MOUNTAIN RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, 1998, 18 (04) : 309 - 320
  • [43] Seismic constraints on dynamic links between geomorphic processes and routing of sediment in a steep mountain catchment
    Burtin, A.
    Hovius, N.
    McArdell, B. W.
    Turowski, J. M.
    Vergne, J.
    [J]. EARTH SURFACE DYNAMICS, 2014, 2 (01) : 21 - 33
  • [44] Geomorphic hazards in south-west Saudi Arabia: The human-environmental nexus
    Sidle, Roy C.
    Al-Shaibani, Abdulaziz M.
    Kaka, SanLinn I.
    [J]. AREA, 2019, 51 (04) : 670 - 680
  • [45] Effect of introduced fish on amphibian assemblages in mountain lakes of northern Spain
    Brana, F
    Frechilla, L
    Orizaola, G
    [J]. HERPETOLOGICAL JOURNAL, 1996, 6 (04): : 145 - 148
  • [46] Estimation of Gravitational Processes in Mountain Areas Using GIS Technologies
    Sofia Gavrilova
    T.G.Glazovskaya
    [J]. 地学前缘, 2009, (S1) : 284 - 284
  • [47] Influence of geodynamic processes on the geoecological state of high mountain areas
    Chotchaev K.O.
    Burdzieva O.G.
    Zaalishvili V.B.
    [J]. Geol. Geofiz. Uga. Ross, 4 (70-100): : 70 - 100
  • [48] Gully erosion in mountain areas: processes, measurement, modelling and regionalization
    Wainwright, J
    Mathys, N
    Esteves, M
    [J]. EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 2006, 31 (02) : 133 - 134
  • [49] STRATEGIES FOR MANAGING RESOURCES IN MOUNTAIN AGRO-ECOSYSTEMS IN NORTHERN SPAIN
    Ruiz, R.
    Bernues, A.
    Garcia-Martinez, A.
    Oregi, L.
    Olaizola, A.
    [J]. OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FOR SMALLHOLDER RUMINANT SYSTEMS IN LATIN AMERICA, 2008, : 75 - 100
  • [50] Climate sensitivity of natural hazards processes in mountain regions: A fuzzy logic approach
    Mani, Peter
    Allen, Simon
    Kotlarski, Sven
    Stoffel, Markus
    [J]. GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2024, 461