Scenario Modelling of Basin-Scale, Shallow Landslide Sediment Yield, Valsassina, Italian Southern Alps

Scenario Modelling of Basin-Scale, Shallow Landslide Sediment Yield, Valsassina, Italian Southern Alps

Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences (2005) 5: 189–202 SRef-ID: 1684-9981/nhess/2005-5-189 Natural Hazards European Geosciences Union and Earth © 2005 Author(s). This work is licensed System Sciences under a Creative Commons License. Scenario modelling of basin-scale, shallow landslide sediment yield, Valsassina, Italian Southern Alps J. C. Bathurst1, G. Moretti1, 2, A. El-Hames1, 3, A. Moaven-Hashemi1, and A. Burton1 1Water Resource Systems Research Laboratory, School of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, United Kingdom 2now at: Institute of Hydraulic Engineering, University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 61, 70550 Stuttgart, Germany 3now at: Department of Hydrology and Water Resource Management, King Abdulaziz University, PO Box 80208, Jeddah 21589, Saudi Arabia Received: 14 September 2004 – Revised: 25 January 2005 – Accepted: 26 January 2005 – Published: 1 February 2005 Part of Special Issue “Landslides and debris flows: analysis, monitoring, modeling and hazard” Abstract. The SHETRAN model for determining the sedi- slide or debris flow (e.g. Guzzetti et al., 1999) but less atten- ment yield arising from shallow landsliding at the scale of a tion has been paid to the off-site or downstream effects posed river catchment was applied to the 180-km2 Valsassina basin by the injection of debris flow material into the stream net- in the Italian Southern Alps, with the aim of demonstrating work. Nevertheless the latter effect can be important, both at that the model can simulate long term patterns of landslid- the scale of a major event (including multiple hillslope fail- ing and the associated sediment yields and that it can be used ures) or as the cumulative result of continuing small scale to explore the sensitivity of the landslide sediment supply failures (e.g. Benda and Dunne, 1997). Recent examples of system to changes in catchment characteristics. The model the sediment related impacts of major debris flow events are was found to reproduce the observed spatial distribution of given by Dhital (2003) and Lopez et al. (2003). Hicks et landslides from a 50-year record very well but probably with al. (2000) report that shallow landsliding is responsible for an overestimate of the annual rate of landsliding. Simulated most of the sediment supplied to an 83-km2 river catchment sediment yields were within the range observed in a wider re- in North Island, New Zealand. The impact on fish habi- gion of northern Italy. However, the results suggest that the tat of accelerated sediment supply from landslides triggered supply of shallow landslide material to the channel network by timber harvesting is highlighted by Kessel (1985) and contributes relatively little to the overall long term sediment Chatwin and Smith (1992) and is a resource management is- yield compared with other sources. The model was applied sue over much of the mountainous area in the western USA. for scenarios of possible future climate (drier and warmer) Other concerns include reservoir sedimentation and aggrada- and land use (fully forested hillslopes). For both scenarios, tion of river beds (with consequences for flooding). Within there is a modest reduction in shallow landslide occurrence the European Union, sediment supply is also relevant to the and the overall sediment yield. This suggests that any current Water Framework Directive, which requires the development schemes for mitigating sediment yield impact in Valsassina of plans for sustainable river basin management (EUROPA, remain valid. The application highlights the need for further 2004). research in eliminating the large number of unconditionally unsafe landslide sites typically predicted by the model and in Hazard assessment has the aims of: (1) determining the avoiding large overestimates of landslide occurrence. spatial distribution of debris flows and landslides; (2) pre- dicting their occurrence and impact; and (3) minimizing the impact. Burton and Bathurst (1998) presented a physically based, spatially distributed model for determining the sedi- 1 Introduction ment yield arising from shallow landsliding at the scale of a river catchment (up to about 500 km2). This can be used pre- Assessment of landslide and debris flow hazard is increas- dictively to explore the effects of possible future land man- ingly required in land use planning in mountain environ- agement activities and changes in catchment characteristics ments. Considerable effort has gone into assessing the on- on landslide incidence (including spatial and temporal distri- site or localized hazard in the area of occurrence of the land- bution) and sediment yield. The model is therefore relevant Correspondence to: J. C. Bathurst to aims (1) and (2) above and, through this relevancy, can ([email protected]) contribute also to meeting aim (3). A test of the model for 190 J. C. Bathurst et al.: Scenario modelling of basin-scale, shallow landslide sediment yield a major landsliding event in the 505-km2 upper Llobregat at a physically realistic scale while remaining applicable at catchment in the southeastern Spanish Pyrenees is reported basin scales (up to 500 km2) likely to be of interest, for ex- by Bathurst et al. (in press). This demonstrated an ability to ample feeding a reservoir. simulate the spatial distribution of landsliding and the catch- The version of SHETRAN used in this application ment sediment yield within quantified uncertainty bounds. (v3.4) simulates an unconfined aquifer composed of a one- However, there remains a need to demonstrate that the model dimensional (vertical flow) unsaturated zone overlying a can simulate long term patterns of landsliding and the asso- two-dimensional (horizontal flow) saturated zone, with a dy- ciated annual sediment yields and that it can be used to ex- namic phreatic surface as the interface between the two. Soil plore the sensitivity of the landslide sediment supply system moisture conditions in the unsaturated zone are modelled us- to changes in catchment characteristics. This paper addresses ing the van Genuchten (1980) equation: these issues through an application to the Valsassina basin = − − = [ + − n]−w in the Southern Alps of Lecco Province, Lombardy, north- S (θ θr )/(θs θr ) 1 ( αh) , (1) ern Italy. In particular the model is tested against a 50-year where S=degree of saturation (dimensionless fraction), 3 −3 record of landslide incidence and is then used to investigate θ=volumetric moisture content (m m ), θs=saturated vol- the impacts of possible future changes in climate and land umetric moisture content (m3 m−3), h=pressure head (m), n, −1 use on shallow landslide incidence and sediment yield. The α (m ) and θr (residual water content) are fitted empirical application was carried out as part of the European Com- constants and w=1–(1/n). The critical saturated zone thick- mission (EC)-funded DAMOCLES project (Bathurst et al., ness for landslide occurrence is modelled using the infinite- 2003; http://www.damocles.irpi.cnr.it). slope, factor of safety equation: h i 2[Cs + Cr ] + (L − m) tan φ γw d sin (2β) tan β 2 SHETRAN shallow landslide model FS = , (2) L 2.1 Model background where q γ γ L = o + m sat + (1 − m) m (3) Full details of the landslide model are given in Burton and γwd γw γw Bathurst (1998). It is a component of the SHETRAN physi- and FS=factor of safety (F S<1 unsafe, FS≥1 safe), cally based, spatially distributed, catchment modelling sys- C =effective soil cohesion (Pa), C =root cohesion (Pa), tem (Ewen et al., 2000), which provides the hydrological s r φ=effective angle of internal friction of soil on an imper- and sediment transport framework for simulating rain- and meable layer (degrees), d=soil depth above the failure plane snowmelt-triggered landsliding and sediment yield. The oc- or shear surface (m), β=slope angle (degrees), q =vegetative currence of shallow landslides is determined as a function of o surcharge per unit plan area (N m−2), γ =weight density of the time- and space-varying soil saturation conditions sim- sat the saturated soil (N m−3), γ =weight density of soil at field ulated by SHETRAN, using infinite slope, factor of safety m moisture content (N m−3), γ =weight density of water (N analysis. Depending on conditions, the eroded material is w m−3), and m=relative saturated depth (thickness of the satu- routed down the hillslope as a debris flow. If the debris flow rated zone divided by soil depth above the failure plane) (di- reaches the channel network, material is injected directly into mensionless fraction) (Ward et al., 1981). This equation (and the channel. In addition, material deposited along the track of the assumption of an infinite slope) is generally accepted as the debris flow may subsequently be washed into the channel the basis for modeling shallow landslides. It should be noted, by overland flow. Material that enters the channel network though, that the SHETRAN landslide model is primarily con- is routed to the catchment outlet by the SHETRAN sediment cerned with the generation of sediment at the basin scale and transport component. is not a detailed geotechnical model for local site applica- Within SHETRAN the spatial distribution of catch- tions. ment properties, rainfall input and hydrological response is The above two equations define the particular data needs achieved in the horizontal direction through the representa- for landslide modeling. It will be helpful also to know that tion of the catchment and the channel system by an orthogo- SHETRAN uses two soil erodibility coefficients to quantify nal grid network and in the vertical direction by a column of the ease with which soil can be eroded by raindrop impact horizontal layers at each grid square. The central feature of and by overland flow respectively. These are defined by the the landslide model is the use of derived relationships (based equations: on a topographic index) to link the SHETRAN grid resolu- tion (which may be as large as 1 or 2 km), at which the basin for raindrop and leaf drip impact: hydrology and sediment yield are modelled, to a subgrid res- olution (typically around 10–100 m) at which landslide oc- Dr = kr Fw 1 − Cg − Cr (Mr + Md ) (4) currence and erosion is modelled.

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    14 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us