83 research outputs found
Assessment of Urban Subsidence in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area (Central-West of Portugal) Applying Sentinel-1 SAR Dataset and Active Deformation Areas Procedure
The Lisbon metropolitan area (LMA, central-west of Portugal) has been severely affected by different geohazards (flooding episodes, landslides, subsidence, and earthquakes) that have generated considerable damage to properties and infrastructures, in the order of millions of euros per year. This study is focused on the analysis of subsidence, as related to urban and industrial activity. Utilizing the A-DInSAR dataset and applying active deformation areas (ADA) processing at the regional scale has allowed us to perform a detailed analysis of subsidence phenomena in the LMA. The dataset consisted of 48 ascending and 61 descending SAR IW-SLC images acquired by the Sentinel-1 A satellite between January 2018 and April 2020. The line-of-sight (LOS), mean deformation velocity (VLOS) maps (mm year(-1)), and deformation time series (mm) were obtained via the Geohazard Exploitation Platform service of the European Space Agency. The maximum VLOS detected, with ascending and descending datasets, were -38.0 and -32.2 mm year(-1), respectively. ADA processing over the LMA allowed for 592 ascending and 560 descending ADAs to be extracted and delimited. From the VLOS measured in both trajectories, a vertical velocity with a maximum value of -32.4 mm year(-1) was estimated. The analyzed subsidence was associated to four ascending and three descending ADAs and characterized by maximum VLOS of -25.5 and -25.2 mm year(-1). The maximum vertical velocity associated with urban subsidence was -32.4 mm year(-1). This subsidence is mainly linked to the compaction of the alluvial and anthropic deposits in the areas where urban and industrial sectors are located. The results of this work have allowed to: (1) detect and assess, from a quantitative point of view, the subsidence phenomena in populated and industrial areas of LMA; (2) establish the relationships between the subsidence phenomena and geological and hydrological characteristics.Programa de Apoyo y Promocion a la Investigacion 2021 at University of Oviedo PAPI-21-PF-22Project SLIDE-APCR FUO-21-069European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the project RISKCOAST of the Interreg SUDOE Programme SOE3/P4/E086
Landslide displacement forecasting using deep learning and monitoring data across selected sites
Accurate early warning systems for landslides are a reliable
risk-reduction strategy that may significantly reduce fatalities
and economic losses. Several machine learning methods have
been examined for this purpose, underlying deep learning (DL)
models’ remarkable prediction capabilities. The long short-term
memory (LSTM) and gated recurrent unit (GRU) algorithms are
the sole DL model studied in the extant comparisons. However,
several other DL algorithms are suitable for time series forecasting
tasks. In this paper, we assess, compare, and describe seven DL
methods for forecasting future landslide displacement: multi-layer
perception (MLP), LSTM, GRU, 1D convolutional neural network
(1D CNN), 2xLSTM, bidirectional LSTM (bi-LSTM), and an architecture
composed of 1D CNN and LSTM (Conv-LSTM). The investigation
focuses on four landslides with different geographic locations,
geological settings, time step dimensions, and measurement
instruments. Two landslides are located in an artificial reservoir
context, while the displacement of the other two is influenced just
by rainfall. The results reveal that the MLP, GRU, and LSTM models
can make reliable predictions in all four scenarios, while the Conv-
LSTM model outperforms the others in the Baishuihe landslide,
where the landslide is highly seasonal. No evident performance
differences were found for landslides inside artificial reservoirs
rather than outside. Furthermore, the research shows that MLP is
better adapted to forecast the highest displacement peaks, while
LSTM and GRU are better suited to model lower displacement
peaks. We believe the findings of this research will serve as a precious
aid when implementing a DL-based landslide early warning
system (LEWS).SUPPORTO
SCIENTIFICO PER L’OTTIMIZZAZIONE, IMPLEMENTAZIONE E
GESTIONE DEL SISTEMA DI MONITORAGGIO CON AGGIORNAMENTO
DELLE SOGLIE DI ALLERTAMENTO DEL FENOMENO
FRANOSO DI SANT’ANDREA – PERAROLO DI CADORE (BL)”
and the Spanish Grant “SARAI, PID2020-116540RB-C21,MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033” and “RISKCOASTInSAR displacement data of the El Arrecife landslideGeohazard Exploitation Platform (GEP) of the European
Space AgencyNoR Projects Sponsorship
(Project ID: 63737
A gender- based approach to the current situation of Spanish dentists
To determine the perception of Spanish dentists about the situation of the profession nowadays and how the changes occurred in dental workforce (in number and gender of the past twenty years) have affected their personal and professional lives, under a g
Effect of Two Immediate Dentin Sealing Approaches on Bond Strength of Lava™ CAD/CAM Indirect Restoration
The study was conducted according to the guidelines of the
Declaration of Helsinki, and approved by the Ethics Committee of the University of Granada (Spain)
(protocol code #1005/CEIH/2019 approved on 13 January 2020).Informed consent was obtained from all subjects involved in the studyThe objective of this work was to compare the micro-tensile bond strength (mu TBS) of CAD/CAM (Computer-Aided Design/ Computer-Aided Manufacturing) specimens cemented with different pairing of adhesives and resin-cements using two Immediate Dentin Dealing (IDS) approaches in comparison with Delay Dentin Sealing (DDS). Coronal dentin from 108 molars were divided into nine groups (n = 12) depending on the adhesive/resin-cement (A-C) assigned. Lava (TM) Ultimate (4 x 10 x 10 mm) was cemented according to different strategies: IDS1(cementation after dentin sealing), DDS (dentin sealing and cementation at 2-weeks), IDS2 (immediate dentin sealing and cementation at 2-weeks). Samples were sectioned and tested until failure to determine the mu TBS. Failure mode was categorized as dentin/cement (DC), at Lava (TM) Ultimate/cement (LC) and hybrid (H). Kruskal-Wallis and Mann-Whitney U tests and influence of the type of failure on the mu TBS by survival analysis with competing risk was explored. Mostly, mu TBS values were equal or higher in IDS2 than DDS. In general, A-Cs that showed higher mu TBS, have high percentages of LC failure. Survival analysis with competing risk between DC + H and LC values showed that some A-Cs would significantly increase the mu TBS values for IDS2. A-Cs with the highest adhesion values showed a high percentage of fractures at the LC interface, suggesting that the adhesion at the adhesive/dentin interface would be higher
ADAtools: Automatic Detection and Classification of Active Deformation Areas from PSI Displacement Maps
This work describes the set of tools developed, tested, and put into production in the context of the H2020 project Multi-scale Observation and Monitoring of Railway Infrastructure Threats (MOMIT). This project, which ended in 2019, aimed to show how the use of various remote sensing techniques could help to improve the monitoring of railway infrastructures, such as tracks or bridges, and thus, consequently, improve the detection of ground instabilities and facilitate their management. Several lines of work were opened by MOMIT, but the authors of this work concentrated their efforts in the design of tools to help the detection and identification of ground movements using synthetic aperture radar interferometry (InSAR) data. The main output of this activity was a set of tools able to detect the areas labelled active deformation areas (ADA), with the highest deformation rates and to connect them to a geological or anthropogenic process. ADAtools is the name given to the aforementioned set of tools. The description of these tools includes the definition of their targets, inputs, and outputs, as well as details on how the correctness of the applications was checked and on the benchmarks showing their performance. The ADAtools include the following applications: ADAfinder, los2hv, ADAclassifier, and THEXfinder. The toolset is targeted at the analysis and interpretation of InSAR results. Ancillary information supports the semi-automatic interpretation and classification process. Two real use-cases illustrating this statement are included at the end of this paper to show the kind of results that may be obtained with the ADAtools.This work has received funding from the Shift2Rail Joint Undertaking under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme, with grant agreement No 777630, project MOMIT, “Multi-scale Observation and Monitoring of railway Infrastructure Threats”. It has been also partially funded by Interreg-Sudoe program of the EU, through the project RISKCOAST (Ref: SOE3/P4/E0868)
Seasonal rockfall risk analysis in a touristic island: Application to the Tramuntana Range (Mallorca, Spain)
Rockfalls are an ever-present possibility in the mountainous context of the Tramuntana Region (Mallorca, Spain). Recent events have shown the high potential for direct and indirect impact on the safety of people and economic activities, lasting for weeks or even months. In the present study, we start from a probabilistic assessment of the rockfall hazard (spatial propensity and temporal recurrence), based on a detailed historical record of occurrences and rockfall modelling, which is subsequently superimposed on three exposure scenarios and on a social vulnerability assessment. Exposure considers the floating population at three seasons of the year, given the area's high tourist aptitude. Vulnerability considers on the one hand the intrinsic characteristics of individuals and, on the other, the characteristics of the surrounding territory that act to facilitate emergency operations, mitigate the immediate impact and enhance rapid recovery. Due to the characteristics of the island and the spatial distribution of tourism, the results show that the highest density of rockfall trajectories potentially affect areas of high exposure, whose access by emergency services is complex. Not being, in general, the areas of highest individual criticality, those areas have in most situations low support capability installed or nearby.
The results constitute a useful tool for emergency and risk management planning in multiple sectors linked to risk governance. Despite the high geographic detail of the analysis, these studies do not replace exposure and vulnerability analysis at the building level, for which the contribution of georeferenced Census data is fundamental
Improving landslide inventories by combining satellite interferometry and landscape analysis: the case of Sierra Nevada (Southern Spain)
An updated and complete landslide inventory is the starting
point for an appropriate hazard assessment. This paper presents
an improvement for landslide mapping by integrating data from
two well-consolidated techniques: Differential Synthetic Aperture
Radar (DInSAR) and Landscape Analysis through the normalised
channel steepness index (ksn). The southwestern sector of the Sierra
Nevada mountain range (Southern Spain) was selected as the case
study. We first propose the double normalised steepness (ksnn)
index, derived from the ksn index, to remove the active tectonics
signal. The obtained ksnn anomalies (or knickzones) along rivers
and the unstable ground areas from the DInSAR analysis rapidly
highlighted the slopes of interest. Thus, we provided a new inventory
of 28 landslides that implies an increase in the area affected
by landslides compared with the previous mapping: 33.5% in the
present study vs. 14.5% in the Spanish Land Movements Database.
The two main typologies of identified landslides are Deep-Seated
Gravitational Slope Deformations (DGSDs) and rockslides, with the
prevalence of large DGSDs in Sierra Nevada being first revealed in
this work. We also demonstrate that the combination of DInSAR
and Landscape Analysis could overcome the limitations of each
method for landslide detection. They also supported us in dealing
with difficulties in recognising this type of landslides due to
their poorly defined boundaries, a homogeneous lithology and the
imprint of glacial and periglacial processes. Finally, a preliminary
hazard perspective of these landslides was outlined.Universidad de Granada/CBUAMarie Curie Actions B-RNM-305-UGR18
A-RNM-508-UGR20
P18-RT-3632ERDF through the project RISKCOAST' of the Interreg SUDOE Programme SOE3/P4/E0868Project MORPHOMED' from the Spanish Ministry of Science (MCIN)/State Research Agency (SRA) PID2019-107138RB-I00Ramon y Cajal' Programme of the Spanish Ministry of Science RYC-2017-23335NoR 6373
Sentinel-1 DInSAR for Monitoring Active Landslides in Critical Infrastructures: The Case of the Rules Reservoir (Southern Spain)
We thank the editors and four anonymous reviewers for helpful comments and suggestions
that improved the manuscript.Landslides in reservoir contexts are a well-recognised hazard that may lead to dangerous
situations regarding infrastructures and people’s safety. Satellite-based radar interferometry is
proving to be a reliable method to monitor the activity of landslides in such contexts. Here, we
present a DInSAR (Differential Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar) analysis of Sentinel-1
images that exemplifies the usefulness of the technique to recognize and monitor landslides in
the Rules Reservoir (Southern Spain). The integration of DInSAR results with a comprehensive
geomorphological study allowed us to understand the typology, evolution and triggering factors
of three active landslides: Lorenzo-1, Rules Viaduct and El Arrecife. We could distinguish between
rotational and translational landslides and, thus, we evaluated the potential hazards related to these
typologies, i.e., retrogression (Lorenzo-1 and Rules Viaduct landslides) or catastrophic slope failure
(El Arrecife Landslide), respectively. We also observed how changes in the water level of the reservoir
influence the landslide’s behaviour. Additionally, we were able to monitor the stability of the Rules
Dam as well as detect the deformation of a highway viaduct that crosses a branch of the reservoir.
Overall, we consider that other techniques must be applied to continue monitoring the movements,
especially in the El Arrecife Landslide, in order to avoid future structural damages and fatalities.A Spanish “Sistema de GarantĂa Juvenil” research contract, founded by the Junta de AndalucĂa and
the European Social Funds, supported the work of Cristina Reyes-Carmona. Spanish “Ramón y Cajal” grant
supported part of the work of Jorge Pedro Galve. This work has been partially funded by the Spanish Ministry
of Economy and Competitiveness through the DEMOS project “Deformation monitoring using Sentinel-1 data”
(Ref: CGL2017-83704-P) and the LITHOSURF project “Respuesta de la topografĂa y la red de drenaje a procesos
litosféricos y climáticos en el sur de Iberia” (Ref: CGL2015-67130-C2-1-R). This work has been partially developed
in the framework of the RISKCOAST project (Ref: SOE3/P4/E0868) funded by the Interreg SUDOE program (3rd
call for proposals)
ADATools: a set of tools for the analysis of terrain movement maps obtained with SAR Interferometry
The SAR Interferometry techniques, Persistent Scatterer Interferometry (PSI) among them, are nowadays known as important tools for monitoring Earth surface movements. Several regional and national Ground Motion Services based on PSI already exist. Moreover, since 2022 the European Ground Motion Service will be operational and will annually provide an updated displacement map over the whole Europe. This will suppose a big amount of ground displacement measurements along the European territory. For each measurement EGMS will provide the annual velocity and the time series of deformation covering the period 2014 to one year prior to each delivery. In this context, it will be more and more necessary having tools to ease the management, analysis, and interpretation, of those wide areas and huge amount of data. We present here a first step in this direction: the ADATools are a set of tools to automatically have secondary, and more operational, products derived from a PSI map. Starting from a fast extraction of the most significant Active Deformation Areas (ADA), with the ADAFinder tool, then we can have a preliminary classification of the most probable phenomena (landslides, subsidence, settlements, or sinkholes) that is behind the detected movement, with the ADAClassifier tool. Moreover, LOS2hv tool allows to derive the horizontal (east-west) and vertical components of the movement in case we have maps of ascending and descending geometries. Finally, it is presented a product that analyzes the local displacement gradients to generate potential damage maps in urban areas. The tools will be presented thorough some results obtained on an area of the Granada County with the use of Sentinel-1 data. All the results have been achieved within the framework of the Riskcoast Project (financed by the Interreg Sudoe Program through the European Regional Development Fund, ERDF).This work was mainly supported by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the project “RISKCOAST” (SOE3/P4/E0868) of the Interreg SUDOE Programme
Evaluation of the SBAS InSAR Service of the European Space Agency’s Geohazard Exploitation Platform (GEP)
The analysis of remote sensing data to assess geohazards is being improved by web-based platforms and collaborative projects, such as the Geohazard Exploitation Platform (GEP) of the European Space Agency (ESA). This paper presents the evaluation of a surface velocity map that is generated by this platform. The map was produced through an unsupervised Multi-temporal InSAR (MTI) analysis applying the Parallel-SBAS (P-SBAS) algorithm to 25 ENVISAT satellite images from the South of Spain that were acquired between 2003 and 2008. This analysis was carried out using a service implemented in the GEP called “SBAS InSAR”. Thanks to the map that was generated by the SBAS InSAR service, we identified processes not documented so far; provided new monitoring data in places affected by known ground instabilities; defined the area affected by these instabilities; and, studied a case where GEP could have been able to help in the forecast of a slope movement reactivation. This amply demonstrates the reliability and usefulness of the GEP, and shows how web-based platforms may enhance the capacity to identify, monitor, and assess hazards that are associated to geological processes.Spanish “Juan de la Cierva” grants support part of the work of Jorge P. Galve. The expenses related to the hired researcher contract of Jorge P. Galve and the field surveying were funded by the project CGL2015-67130-C2-1-R (FEDER and Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness)
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