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Impact, Mechanism, Monitoring of Land Subsidence in Coastal Cities (Annual Work of IGCP 663)

Authors :
Yan, Xuexin
Yang, Tianliang
Xu, Yan
Tosi, Luigi
Stouthamer, Esther
Andreas, Heri
Lin, Jinxin
Huang, Xinlei
Yan, Xuexin
Yang, Tianliang
Xu, Yan
Tosi, Luigi
Stouthamer, Esther
Andreas, Heri
Lin, Jinxin
Huang, Xinlei
Source :
Acta Geologica Sinica vol.93 (2019) nr.S3 p.158-159 [ISSN 1000-9515]
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Land subsidence is a worldwide geohazard consisting in the lowering of the ground surface due to natural and human-induced processes occurring in the shallow and deep subsoil. Over the last two decades, land subsidence has caused damages and widespread impacts to a variety of infrastructures in coastal cities (Ma et al., 2011; Liu et al., 2016; Minderhoud et al., 2018). Meanwhile, it is particularly alarming as it reduces the ground elevation with respect to the sea level. The IGCP 663 aims to jointly carry out international academic communication and cooperation, to further and promote the international understanding, advanced technical analysis and evaluation methods of land subsidence, and exchange experiences and research results worldwide, especially in coastal cities and regions. The joint researches of IGCP 663 carried out during 2018 have improved the understanding of the land subsidence in typical coastal areas and cities, and the main causes of land subsidence in global coastal cities were figured out through several case studies in China, Italy, the Netherlands and Indonesia: groundwater withdrawal for drinking water (e.g., Jakarta, Chaussard et al., 2013), groundwater lowering for construction (e.g., Shanghai, Wang et al., 2018), oxidation of peat and compaction of soft soils (e.g. the Netherlands, Sanneke et al., 2018), extraction of hydrocarbons (e.g., northern Netherlands, Koster et al., 2018) and natural consolidation of Holocene deposits (e.g., Venice, Da et al., 2018; Tosi et al., 2018). Shanghai was set as an example of how could deal with land subsidence by taking measures of constructing comprehensive monitoring network, taking artificial recharge, restricting groundwater pumping, and making politics and regulations, etc (Wang et al., 2014). Moreover, we investigated the spatial distribution characteristics, physical and mechanical properties of the reclaimed soil and its underlying natural sedimentary soil along the coast of Shanghai, in ord

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Acta Geologica Sinica vol.93 (2019) nr.S3 p.158-159 [ISSN 1000-9515]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1111/1755-6724.14276, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1453248103
Document Type :
Electronic Resource