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Landslide databases in the Geological Surveys of Europe

Authors :
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
Jensen, Odd Are
Publication Year :
2017

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

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Europa, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1342483659
Document Type :
Electronic Resource