Comparison between monitored and modeled pore water pressure and safety factor in a slope susceptible to shallow landslides.
Abstract
Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Abstract:
Shallow landslides can be defined as slope movements affecting superficial deposits of small thicknesses which
are usually triggered due to extreme rainfall events, also very concentrated in time. Shallow landslides are
hazardous phenomena: in particular, if they happen close to urbanized areas they could cause significant damages
to cultivations, structures, infrastructures and, sometimes, human losses.
The triggering mechanism of rainfall-induced shallow landslides is strictly linked with the hydrological and
mechanical responses of usually unsaturated soils to rainfall events. For this reason, it is fundamental knowing
the intrinsic hydro-mechanical properties of the soils in order to assess both susceptibility and hazard of shallow
landslide and to develop early-warning systems at large scale.
The hydrological data collected by a 20 months monitoring on a slope susceptible to shallow landslides in an
area of the North –Eastern Oltrepo Pavese (Northern Apennines, Italy) were used to identify the hydrological
behaviors of the investigated soils towards rainfall events. Field conditions under different rainfall trends have also
been modeled by using both hydrological and physically-based stability models for the evaluation of the slope
safety factor . The main objectives of this research are: (a) to compare the field measured pore water pressures at
different depths with results of hydrological models, in order to evaluate the efficiency of the tested models and to
determine how precipitations affect pore pressure development; (b) to compare the time trends of the safety factor
that have been obtained by applying different stability models; (c) to evaluate, through a sensitivity analysis, the
effects of soil hydrological properties on modeling pore water pressure and safety factor.
The test site slope where field measurements were acquired is representative of other sites in Northern Apennines
affected by shallow landslides and is characterized by medium-high topographic gradient (ranging from 22 to
35
◦
). The bedrock is made up of gravel, sand and poorly cemented conglomerates; superficial soils, derived by the
weathered bedrock, are prevalently clayey-sandy silts and clayey-silty sands with different amounts of pebbles and
carbonate concretions. A geotechnical, mechanical, pedological and mineralogical characterization of superficial
deposits was performed. Laboratory reconstruction of hysteretic soil water characteristic curves was also carried
out to determine the main soil hydrological properties.
The experimental station consists in a pluviometer, a thermo-hygrometer, a barometer, an anemometer and a
net radiometer. Six TDR probes equipped with a multiplexer are installed at 0.2, 0.4, 0.6, 1, 1.2, 1.4 m from
ground level to measure volumetric water content; to measure pore water pressure, three tensiometers and three
heat dissipation sensors are installed at 0.2, 0.6, 1.2 m from ground level. The data are collected by a CR1000
datalogger (Campbell Sci. Inc.) each 10 minutes.
In this work the results of the comparison between monitored and modeled pore water pressures and the safety
factor in different conditions are analyzed in order to understand the hydro-mechanical properties that could
predispose the triggering mechanism of shallow instabilities and the processes that have to be taken into account
in the evaluation of shallow landslides susceptibility.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.5 Abstract in rivista
Keywords:
shallow landslide; OLTREPO PAVESE
Elenco autori:
Bordoni, Massimiliano; Meisina, Claudia; Zizioli, Davide; Valentino, R.; Bittelli, M.; Chersich, S.
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