19 results on '"Kociu, Arben"'
Search Results
2. Integration of landslide hazard into urban planning across Europe
- Author
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Mateos, Rosa María, López-Vinielles, Juan, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Tsagkas, Dimetrios, Sheehy, Michael, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, Liscák, Pavel, Podolski, Laszlo, Laskowicz, Izabela, Iadanza, Carla, Gauert, Christoph, Todorović, Saša, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Maftei, Raluca, Hermanns, Reginald L, Kociu, Arben, Sandić, Cvjetko, Mauter, Rike, Sarro, Roberto, Béjar, Marta, and Herrera, Gerardo
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Combining release and runout in statistical landslide susceptibility modeling
- Author
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Mergili, Martin, Schwarz, Leonhard, and Kociu, Arben
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Integration of Geohazards into Urban and Land-Use Planning. Towards a Landslide Directive. The EuroGeoSurveys Questionnaire
- Author
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Mateos, Rosa María, Herrera, Gerardo, García-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Gilles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jez, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Comerci, Valerio, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, Maria, Kułak, Marcin, Laskowicz, Izabela, Sheehy, Michael, Kopackova, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Dehls, John F., Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Pagespetit, Pere Buxó, González, Marta, Banks, Vanessa, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lidia, Oliveira, Daniel, Dias, Ruben, Sandić, Cvjetko, Mikos, Matjaz, editor, Tiwari, Binod, editor, Yin, Yueping, editor, and Sassa, Kyoji, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Landslide Susceptibility Mapping at National Scale: A First Attempt for Austria
- Author
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Lima, Pedro, Steger, Stefan, Glade, Thomas, Tilch, Nils, Schwarz, Leonhard, Kociu, Arben, Mikos, Matjaz, editor, Tiwari, Binod, editor, Yin, Yueping, editor, and Sassa, Kyoji, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. New Perspectives on Landslide Assessment for Spatial Planning in Austria
- Author
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Kociu, Arben, Schwarz, Leonhard, Hagen, Karl, Rudolf-Miklau, Florian, Mikoš, Matjaž, editor, Vilímek, Vít, editor, Yin, Yueping, editor, and Sassa, Kyoji, editor
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Landslide monitoring techniques in the Geological Surveys of Europe
- Author
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Slovenian Research Agency, Herrera García, Gerardo [0000-0002-6633-9184], Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María [0000-0002-3905-0692], Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Herrera García, Gerardo, Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Quental, Lídia, Severine, Bernardie, Peternel, Tina, Podolszki, Laszlo, Calcaterra, Stefano, Kociu, Arben, Warmuz, Bartłomiej, Jelének, Jan, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, Becher, Gustaf Peterson, Dashwood, Claire, Ondrus, Peter, Minkevičius, Vytautas, Todorović, Saša, Møller, Jens Jørgen, Marturià, Jordi J., Slovenian Research Agency, Herrera García, Gerardo [0000-0002-6633-9184], Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María [0000-0002-3905-0692], Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Herrera García, Gerardo, Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Quental, Lídia, Severine, Bernardie, Peternel, Tina, Podolszki, Laszlo, Calcaterra, Stefano, Kociu, Arben, Warmuz, Bartłomiej, Jelének, Jan, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, Becher, Gustaf Peterson, Dashwood, Claire, Ondrus, Peter, Minkevičius, Vytautas, Todorović, Saša, Møller, Jens Jørgen, and Marturià, Jordi J.
- Abstract
[EN] Landslide monitoring is a mandatory step in landslide risk assessment. It requires collecting data on landslide conditions (e.g., areal extent, landslide kinematics, surface topography, hydrogeometeorological parameters, and failure surfaces) from different time periods and at different scales, from site-specific to local, regional, and national, to assess landslide activity. In this analysis, we collected information on landslide monitoring techniques from 17 members of the Earth Observation and Geohazards Expert Group (from EuroGeoSurveys) deployed between 2005 and 2021. We examined the types of the 75 recorded landslides, the landslide techniques, spatial resolution, temporal resolution, status of the technique (operational, non-operational), time of using (before the event, during the event, after the event), and the applicability of the technique in early warning systems. The research does not indicate the accuracy of each technique but, rather, the extent to which Geological Surveys conduct landslide monitoring and the predominant techniques used. Among the types of landslides, earth slides predominate and are mostly monitored by geological and engineering geological mapping. The results showed that Geological Surveys mostly utilized more traditional monitoring techniques since they have a broad mandate to collect geological data. In addition, this paper provides new insights into the role of the Geological Surveys on landslide monitoring in Europe and contributes to landslide risk reduction initiatives and commitments (e.g., the Kyoto Landslide Commitment 2020).
- Published
- 2023
8. Landslide databases in the Geological Surveys of Europe
- Author
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Herrera, Gerardo, Mateos, Rosa María, García-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Gilles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Jemec Auflič, Mateja, Jež, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Iadanza, Carla, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, Maria, Kułak, Marcin, Sheehy, Michael, Pellicer, Xavier M., McKeown, Charise, Ryan, Graham, Kopačková, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Buxó, Pere, Gonzalez, Marta, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Pauditš, Peter, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lídia, Sandić, Cvjetko, Fusi, Balazs, and Jensen, Odd Are
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Role of Geological Surveys of Europe in landslide monitoring
- Author
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Jemec Auflič, Mateja, primary, Herrera, Gerardo, additional, Mateos, Rosa María, additional, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, additional, Quental, Lídia, additional, Severine, Bernardie, additional, Peternel, Tina, additional, Podolszki, Laszlo, additional, Calcaterra, Stefano, additional, Kociu, Arben, additional, Warmuz, Bartłomiej, additional, Jelének, Jan, additional, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, additional, Peterson Becher, Gustaf, additional, Dashwood, Claire, additional, Ondrus, Peter, additional, Minkevičius, Vytautas, additional, Todorović, Saša, additional, Møller, Jens Jørgen, additional, and Marturia, Jordi, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Copernicus European Ground Motion Service (EGMS) validation: a landslide monitoring prospective.
- Author
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Vecchiotti, Filippo, primary and Kociu, Arben, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. The Use of TERRA-ASTER Satellite for Landslide Detection
- Author
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Vecchiotti, Filippo, primary, Tilch, Nils, additional, and Kociu, Arben, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Landslides monitoring techniques review in the Geological Surveys of Europe
- Author
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Jemec Auflič, Mateja, primary, Herrera, Gerardo, additional, María Mateos, Rosa, additional, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, additional, Quental, Lídia, additional, Severine, Bernardie, additional, Peternel, Tina, additional, Podolszki, Laszlo, additional, Iadanza, Carla, additional, Kociu, Arben, additional, Warmuz, Bartłomiej, additional, Jelének, Jan, additional, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, additional, Peterson Becher, Gustaf, additional, Dashwood, Claire, additional, Liščák, Pavel, additional, Minkevičius, Vytautas, additional, Todorović, Saša, additional, and Jørgen Møller, Jens, additional
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Integration of landslide hazard into urban planning across Europe
- Author
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European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Béjar Pizarro, Marta [0000-0001-7449-4048], Herrera García, Gerardo [0000-0002-6633-9184], Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, López-Vinielles, Juan, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Tsagkas, Dimetrios, Sheehy, Michael, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, Liščák, Pavel, Podolski, Laszlo, Laskowicz, Izabela, Iadanza, Carla, Gauert, Christoph, Todorović, Saša, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Maftei, Raluca, Hermanns, Reginald L., Kociu, Arben, Sandić, Cvjetko, Mauter, Rike, Sarro Trigueros, Roberto, Béjar Pizarro, Marta, Herrera García, Gerardo, European Commission, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Béjar Pizarro, Marta [0000-0001-7449-4048], Herrera García, Gerardo [0000-0002-6633-9184], Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, López-Vinielles, Juan, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Tsagkas, Dimetrios, Sheehy, Michael, Hadjicharalambous, Kleopas, Liščák, Pavel, Podolski, Laszlo, Laskowicz, Izabela, Iadanza, Carla, Gauert, Christoph, Todorović, Saša, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Maftei, Raluca, Hermanns, Reginald L., Kociu, Arben, Sandić, Cvjetko, Mauter, Rike, Sarro Trigueros, Roberto, Béjar Pizarro, Marta, and Herrera García, Gerardo
- Abstract
[EN] An enquiry-based and participatory analysis approach is carried out to identify the strengths and weaknesses in the heterogeneous legislations across Europe that regulate the integration of landslide hazard into urban planning. Twenty one national and eight regional Geological Surveys (GSs) have participated in the analysis. The GSs report almost 4000 recent (2015–2017) damaging landslides events resulting in 39 fatalities and 155 injuries, destruction to housing, infrastructure and properties. In addition, 11 countries report 18 MORLE events over the past 10 years responsible for 150 fatalities and severe economic impacts. Results also reveal almost 48 million people living in areas with high and very high degrees of landslide-susceptibility (around 1 million km2 according to ELSUS v2). This work shows that almost half the participating countries (10 countries) have no legal guidance in the National Land Bill to stipulate consideration of landslides in urban planning practices, and mapping tools are often not adapted to a standard required to inform sustainable development. Furthermore, there is a wide range of laws and a large heterogeneity of mapping methods, scales and procedures. A relevant deficiency detected in many countries is the lack of landslide maps at a detailed resolution for urban planning. Additionally, some case studies of suboptimal urban development practices in areas of known instability have been discussed; they are found to be related to weak rule of law and/or absence of good governance. This paper shows inconsistencies across Europe in the handling of landslides and proposes a series of key actions to improve this situation, highlighting the need for a common regulatory framework to deal with this geohazard appropriately.
- Published
- 2020
14. Comparing Manual and Semi-Automated Landslide Mapping Based on Optical Satellite Images from Different Sensors
- Author
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Hölbling, Daniel, primary, Eisank, Clemens, additional, Albrecht, Florian, additional, Vecchiotti, Filippo, additional, Friedl, Barbara, additional, Weinke, Elisabeth, additional, and Kociu, Arben, additional
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Integration of geohazards into urban and land-use planning. Towards a Landslide Directive. The EuroGeoSurveys Questionnaire
- Author
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Mikos, M., Mateos, Rosa María, Herrera, Gerardo, García-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Gilles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jez, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Comerci, Valerio, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, Maria, Kułak, Marcin, Laskowicz, Izabela, Sheehy, Michael, Kopackova, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Dehls, John F., Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Pagespetit, Pere Buxó, González, Marta, Banks, Vanessa, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lidia, Oliveira, Daniel, Dias, Ruben, Sandić, Cvjetko, Mikos, M., Mateos, Rosa María, Herrera, Gerardo, García-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Gilles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jez, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Comerci, Valerio, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, Maria, Kułak, Marcin, Laskowicz, Izabela, Sheehy, Michael, Kopackova, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Dehls, John F., Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Pagespetit, Pere Buxó, González, Marta, Banks, Vanessa, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lidia, Oliveira, Daniel, Dias, Ruben, and Sandić, Cvjetko
- Abstract
Exposure to hazards is expected to increase in Europe, due to rapid population growth in urban areas and the escalation of urbanization throughout many countries. In the framework of the European Geological Surveys (EGS), the Earth Observation and Geohazards Expert Group (EOEG) has carried out a survey based enquiry regarding the integration of geohazards (earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, ground subsidence, floods and others) into urban and land-use planning. Responses from 19 European countries and 5 regions reveal heterogeneous policies across national borders. 17% of the countries have not yet implemented any legal measures to integrate geohazards into urban and land-use plans and half of the participating countries have no official methodological guides to construct geohazard maps. Additionally, there is a scarce knowledge about real social impacts of geohazards and resulting disasters in many of the countries, although they have a significant impact on their national economies. This overview stresses the need for a common legislative framework and homogenization of the national legislations as well as mutual guidelines which adopt the principles applicable to the management of geohazards and explain the process to be followed in the production of hazard documentation. This is especially relevant in case of landslide and subsidence hazards; although those are of great importance in Europe, there are no common guidelines and practices similar to Directive 2007/60/EC on the assessment and management of flood risk. Based on their expertise, EuroGeoSurveys (EGS) have the potential to coordinate this activity in European geohazard guidelines and to promote the interaction among stakeholders.
- Published
- 2017
16. Landslide databases in the Geological Surveys of Europe
- Author
-
Herrera García, Gerardo, Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, García López-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Giles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jež, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Iadanza, Carla, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, María, Kułak, Marcin, Sheehy, Michael, Pellicer, Xavier M., McKeown, Charise, Ryan, Graham, Kopačková, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Buxó, Pere, Gonzalez, Marta, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Pauditš, Peter, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lídia, Sandić, Cvjetko, Fusi, Balazs, Jensen, Odd Are, Herrera García, Gerardo, Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, García López-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Giles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jež, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Iadanza, Carla, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, María, Kułak, Marcin, Sheehy, Michael, Pellicer, Xavier M., McKeown, Charise, Ryan, Graham, Kopačková, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Buxó, Pere, Gonzalez, Marta, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Pauditš, Peter, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lídia, Sandić, Cvjetko, Fusi, Balazs, and Jensen, Odd Are
- Abstract
Landslides are one of the most widespread geohazards in Europe, producing significant social and economic impacts. Rapid population growth in urban areas throughout many countries in Europe and extreme climatic scenarios can considerably increase landslide risk in the near future. Variability exists between European countries in both the statutory treatment of landslide risk and the use of official assessment guidelines. This suggests that a European Landslides Directive that provides a common legal framework for dealing with landslides is necessary. With this long-term goal in mind, this work analyzes the landslide databases from the Geological Surveys of Europe focusing on their interoperability and completeness. The same landslide classification could be used for the 849,543 landslide records from the Geological Surveys, from which 36% are slides, 10% are falls, 20% are flows, 11% are complex slides, and 24% either remain unclassified or correspond to another typology. Most of them are mapped with the same symbol at a scale of 1:25,000 or greater, providing the necessary information to elaborate European-scale susceptibility maps for each landslide type. A landslide density map was produced for the available records from the Geological Surveys (LANDEN map) showing, for the first time, 210,544 km2 landslide-prone areas and 23,681 administrative areas where the Geological Surveys from Europe have recorded landslides. The comparison of this map with the European landslide susceptibility map (ELSUS 1000 v1) is successful for most of the territory (69.7%) showing certain variability between countries. This comparison also permitted the identification of 0.98 Mkm2 (28.9%) of landslide-susceptible areas without records from the Geological Surveys, which have been used to evaluate the landslide database completeness. The estimated completeness of the landslide databases (LDBs) from the Geological Surveys is 17%, varying between 1 and 55%. This variability is due to the d
- Published
- 2017
17. Integration of Geohazards into Urban and Land-Use Planning: towards a Landslide Directive: the EuroGeoSurveys Questionnaire
- Author
-
Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, Herrera García, Gerardo, García López-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Giles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jež, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Comerci, Valerio, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, María, Kułak, Marcin, Laskowicz, Izabela, Sheehy, Michael, Kopačková, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Dehls, John F., Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Buxó, Pere, Gonzalez, Marta, Banks, Vanessa, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lídia, Oliveira, D. de, Dias, R., Sandić, Cvjetko, Mateos Ruiz, Rosa María, Herrera García, Gerardo, García López-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Giles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Auflič, Mateja Jemec, Jež, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Comerci, Valerio, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, María, Kułak, Marcin, Laskowicz, Izabela, Sheehy, Michael, Kopačková, Veronika, Frei, Michaela, Kuhn, Dirk, Dehls, John F., Hermanns, Reginald L., Koulermou, Niki, Smith, Colby A., Engdahl, Mats, Buxó, Pere, Gonzalez, Marta, Banks, Vanessa, Dashwood, Claire, Reeves, Helen, Cigna, Francesca, Liščák, Pavel, Mikulėnas, Vidas, Demir, Vedad, Raha, Margus, Quental, Lídia, Oliveira, D. de, Dias, R., and Sandić, Cvjetko
- Abstract
Exposure to hazards is expected to increase in Europe, due to rapid population growth in urban areas and the escalation of urbanization throughout many countries. In the framework of the European Geological Surveys (EGS), the Earth Observation and Geohazards Expert Group (EOEG) has carried out a survey based enquiry regarding the integration of geohazards (earthquakes, volcanoes, landslides, ground subsidence, floods and others) into urban and land-use planning. Responses from 19 European countries and 5 regions reveal heterogeneous policies across national borders. 17% of the countries have not yet implemented any legal measures to integrate geohazards into urban and land-use plans and half of the participating countries have no official methodological guides to construct geohazard maps. Additionally, there is a scarce knowledge about real social impacts of geohazards and resulting disasters in many of the countries, although they have a significant impact on their national economies. This overview stresses the need for a common legislative framework and homogenization of the national legislations as well as mutual guidelines which adopt the principles applicable to the management of geohazards and explain the process to be followed in the production of hazard documentation. This is especially relevant in case of landslide and subsidence hazards; although those are of great importance in Europe, there are no common guidelines and practices similar to Directive 2007/60/EC on the assessment and management of flood risk. Based on their expertise, EuroGeoSurveys (EGS) have the potential to coordinate this activity in European geohazard guidelines and to promote the interaction among stakeholders.
- Published
- 2017
18. Landslide databases in the Geological Surveys of Europe.
- Author
-
Herrera, Gerardo, Mateos, Rosa María, García-Davalillo, Juan Carlos, Grandjean, Gilles, Poyiadji, Eleftheria, Maftei, Raluca, Filipciuc, Tatiana-Constantina, Jemec Auflič, Mateja, Jež, Jernej, Podolszki, Laszlo, Trigila, Alessandro, Iadanza, Carla, Raetzo, Hugo, Kociu, Arben, Przyłucka, Maria, Kułak, Marcin, Sheehy, Michael, Pellicer, Xavier M., McKeown, Charise, and Ryan, Graham
- Subjects
LANDSLIDE hazard analysis ,GEOLOGICAL surveys ,ECONOMIC impact ,GUIDELINES ,MATHEMATICAL variables ,GEOLOGY - Abstract
Landslides are one of the most widespread geohazards in Europe, producing significant social and economic impacts. Rapid population growth in urban areas throughout many countries in Europe and extreme climatic scenarios can considerably increase landslide risk in the near future. Variability exists between European countries in both the statutory treatment of landslide risk and the use of official assessment guidelines. This suggests that a European Landslides Directive that provides a common legal framework for dealing with landslides is necessary. With this long-term goal in mind, this work analyzes the landslide databases from the Geological Surveys of Europe focusing on their interoperability and completeness. The same landslide classification could be used for the 849,543 landslide records from the Geological Surveys, from which 36% are slides, 10% are falls, 20% are flows, 11% are complex slides, and 24% either remain unclassified or correspond to another typology. Most of them are mapped with the same symbol at a scale of 1:25,000 or greater, providing the necessary information to elaborate European-scale susceptibility maps for each landslide type. A landslide density map was produced for the available records from the Geological Surveys (LANDEN map) showing, for the first time, 210,544 km
2 landslide-prone areas and 23,681 administrative areas where the Geological Surveys from Europe have recorded landslides. The comparison of this map with the European landslide susceptibility map (ELSUS 1000 v1) is successful for most of the territory (69.7%) showing certain variability between countries. This comparison also permitted the identification of 0.98 Mkm2 (28.9%) of landslide-susceptible areas without records from the Geological Surveys, which have been used to evaluate the landslide database completeness. The estimated completeness of the landslide databases (LDBs) from the Geological Surveys is 17%, varying between 1 and 55%. This variability is due to the different landslide strategies adopted by each country. In some of them, landslide mapping is systematic; others only record damaging landslides, whereas in others, landslide maps are only available for certain regions or local areas. Moreover, in most of the countries, LDBs from the Geological Surveys co-exist with others owned by a variety of public institutions producing LDBs at variable scales and formats. Hence, a greater coordination effort should be made by all the institutions working in landslide mapping to increase data integration and harmonization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. MorphoSAT - Automated geomorpological mapping based on satellite data.
- Author
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Eisank, Clemens, Petrini-Monteferri, Frederic, Meißl, Gertraud, D'Oleire-Oltmanns, Sebastian, Vecchiotti, Filippo, Wichmann, Volker, Georges, Christian, Kociu, Arben, and Stötter, Johann
- Published
- 2018
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