Back to Search Start Over

Rapid characterisation of the extremely large landslide threatening the Rules Reservoir (Southern Spain)

Authors :
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Junta de Andalucía
European Commission
Reyes-Carmona, Cristina
Galve, Jorge Pedro
Moreno-Sánchez, Marcos
Riquelme, Adrián
Ruano, Patricia
Millares, Agustín
Teixidó, T.
Sarro Trigueros, Roberto
Pérez-Peña, José Vicente
Barra, Anna
Ezquerro Martín, Pablo
López-Vinielles, Juan
Béjar Pizarro, Marta
Azañón, José Miguel
Monserrat, Oriol
Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María
Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (España)
Agencia Estatal de Investigación (España)
Junta de Andalucía
European Commission
Reyes-Carmona, Cristina
Galve, Jorge Pedro
Moreno-Sánchez, Marcos
Riquelme, Adrián
Ruano, Patricia
Millares, Agustín
Teixidó, T.
Sarro Trigueros, Roberto
Pérez-Peña, José Vicente
Barra, Anna
Ezquerro Martín, Pablo
López-Vinielles, Juan
Béjar Pizarro, Marta
Azañón, José Miguel
Monserrat, Oriol
Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

When an active landslide is first identified in an artificial reservoir, a comprehensive study has to be quickly conducted to analyse the possible hazard that it may represent to such a critical infrastructure. This paper presents the case of the El Arrecife Landslide, located in a slope of the Rules Reservoir (Southern Spain), as an example of geological and motion data integration for elaborating a preliminary hazard assessment. For this purpose, a field survey was carried out to define the kinematics of the landslide: translational in favour of a specific foliation set, and rotational at the foot of the landslide. A possible failure surface has been proposed, as well as an estimation of the volume of the landslide: 14.7 million m. At the same time, remote sensing and geophysical techniques were applied to obtain historical displacement rates. A mean subsidence rate of the landslide around 2 cm/year was obtained by means of synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) and ground-penetrating radar (GPR) data, during the last 5 and 22 years, respectively. The structure-from-motion (SfM) technique provided a rate up to 26 cm/year during the last 14 years of a slag heap located within the foot of the landslide, due to compaction of the anthropical deposits. All of this collected information will be valuable to optimise the planning of future monitoring surveys (i.e. differential global positioning systems, inclinometers, ground drilling, and InSAR) that should be applied in order to prevent further damage on the reservoir and related infrastructures.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342485678
Document Type :
Electronic Resource