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The AVI project: A bibliographical and archive inventory of landslides and floods in Italy 总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9
The AVI project was commissioned by the Minister of Civil Protection to the National Group for Prevention of Hydrogeologic Hazards to complete an inventory of areas historically affected by landslides and floods in Italy. More than 300 people, divided into 15 research teams and two support groups, worked for one year on the project. Twenty-two journals were systematically searched for the period 1918–1990, 350,000 newspaper issues were screened, and 39,953 articles were collected. About 150 experts on mass movement and floods were interviewed and 1482 published and unpublished technical and scientific reports were reviewed. The results of the AVI project, in spite of the limitations, represent the most comprehensive archiving of mass movement and floods ever prepared in Italy. The type and quality of the information collected and the methodologies and techniques used to make the inventory are discussed. Possible applications and future developments are also presented. 相似文献
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Little is known about the vulnerability to landslides, despite landslides causing frequent and widespread damage to the population
and the built-up environment in many areas of the world. Lack of information about vulnerability to landslides limits our
ability to determine landslide risk. This paper provides information on the vulnerability of buildings and roads to landslides
in Umbria, central Italy. Information on 103 landslides of the slide and slide-earth flow types that have resulted in damage
to buildings and roads at 90 sites in Umbria is used to establish dependencies between the area of the landslide and the vulnerability
to landslides. The dependencies obtained are applied in the hills surrounding the town of Collazzone, in central Umbria, an
area for which a detailed landslide inventory map is available. By exploiting the landslide inventory and the established
vulnerability curves, the geographical distribution of the vulnerability to landslides is mapped and statistics of the expected
damage are calculated. Reliability and limits of the vulnerability thresholds and of the obtained vulnerability assessment
are discussed. 相似文献
3.
Gariano Stefano Luigi Petrucci Olga Rianna Guido Santini Monia Guzzetti Fausto 《Regional Environmental Change》2018,18(2):437-449
Regional Environmental Change - Land use and land cover (LULC), as well as their geographical and temporal variations, affect landslide occurrence and the related risk, in ways that are difficult... 相似文献
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We have compiled a database of floods and landslides that occurred in Italy between AD 1279 and 2002 and caused deaths, missing persons, injuries, and homelessness. Analysis of the database indicates that more than 50,593 people died, went missing, or were injured in 2580 flood and landslide events. Harmful events were inventoried in 26.3% of the 8103 Italian municipalities. Fatal events were most frequent in the Alpine regions of northern Italy and were caused by both floods and landslides. In southern Italy, landslides were the principal agents of fatalities and were most numerous in the Campania region. Casualties were most frequent in the autumn. Fast-moving landslides, including rock falls, rockslides, rock avalanches, and debris flows, caused the largest number of deaths. In order to assess the overall risk posed by these processes, we merged the historical catalogs and identified 2682 “hydrogeomorphological” events that triggered single or multiple landslides and floods. We estimated individual risk through the calculation of mortality rates for both floods and landslides and compared these rates to the death rates for other natural, medical, and human-induced hazards in Italy. We used the frequency distribution of events with fatalities to ascertain the magnitude and frequency of the societal risks posed by floods and landslides. We quantified these risks in a Bayesian model that describes the probabilities of fatal flood and landslide events in Italy. 相似文献
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Comparing Landslide Maps: A Case Study in the Upper Tiber River Basin, Central Italy 总被引:17,自引:0,他引:17
/ The preparation of landslide maps is an important step in any landslide hazard assessment. Landslides maps are prepared around the world, but little effort is made to assess their reliability, outline their main characteristics, and pinpoint their limitations. In order to redress this imbalance, the results of a long-term research project in the Upper Tiber River basin in central Italy are used to compare reconnaissance and detailed landslide inventory maps, statistical and geomorphologically based density maps, and landslide hazard maps obtained by multivariate statistical modeling. An attempt is made to discuss advantages and limitations of the available maps, outlining possible applications for decision-makers, land developers, and environmental and civil defence agencies. The Tiber experiment has confirmed that landslides can be cost-effectively mapped by interpreting aerial photographs coupled with field surveys and that errors and uncertainties associated with the inventory can be quantified. The experiment has shown that GIS makes it easy to prepare landslide density maps and facilitates the production of statistically based landslide hazard models. The former supply an overview of the distribution of landslides that is easily comprehended but do not provide insight on the causes of instability. The latter, giving insight into the causes of instability, are diagnostically powerful, but are difficult to prepare and exploit. 相似文献
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