Published 2020
| Version v1
Publication
Rainfall Threshold for Shallow Landslides Initiation and Analysis of Long-Term Rainfall Trends in a Mediterranean Area
Contributors
Description
The effects of climate change on landslide activity may have important environmental, socioeconomic,
and political consequences. In the last decades, several short-term extreme rainfall events
affected Mediterranean regions, resulted in damaging geo-hydrological processes and casualties. It is
unequivocal that the impact of landslides in several Mediterranean countries is increasing with time, but
until now, there has been little or no quantitative data to support these increases. In this paper, both
rainfall conditions for the occurrence of shallow landslides and rainfall trends were investigated in the
Portofino promontory, which extends in the Ligurian Sea, where heavy rainfall and related ground
effects often occur. Adopting a frequentist approach, the empirical intensity-duration threshold was
estimated. Our findings highlight that the rainfall intensity required to trigger landslides is lower for the
same duration than those expected in other similar environments, suggesting a high susceptibility to
rainfall-induced landslides in the Portofino territory. Further, the Mann-Kendall test and Hurst exponent
were used for detecting potential trends. Analysis of long-term rainfall time series showed statistically
significant increasing trends in short duration precipitation occurrence and rainfall rates, suggesting a
possible future scenario with a more frequent exceedance of the threshold triggering value and an
increase of landslide risk.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1033891
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1033891
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE