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The occurrence and behavior of rainfall-triggered landslides in coastal British Columbia.

机译:不列颠哥伦比亚省沿海地区降雨触发的滑坡的发生和行为。

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摘要

This thesis seeks to analyze the occurrence and behavior of rainfall-triggered landslides in coastal British Columbia. In particular, it focuses on the analysis of landslide temporal and spatial distributions occurrence and their magnitudes, and considers the major factors that influence regional landslide behavior. Implicit in the research is the understanding that the landscape of coastal BC is managed, and that landslides, in addition to occurring naturally may be caused by, and certainly impact, resources that are important to humankind. Underlying each chapter is the rationale that by better understanding the causes of, and controls on landslide occurrence and magnitude, we can reduce the impacts and lower the associated risk. Statistical magnitude-frequency relationships are examined in coastal BC. Observations suggest that landslides in coastal British Columbia tend to a larger size until about 10,000 m2 in total area. At this point larger landslides are limited by landscape controls according to a power law. Probabilistic regional hazard analysis is one logical outcome of magnitude-frequency analysis and a regional mass movement hazard map for Vancouver Island is presented. Physiographic controls on statistical magnitude-frequency distributions are examined using a cellular automata based model and results compare favorably to actual landslide behavior: modeled landslides bifurcate at local elevation highs, deposit mass preferentially where the local slopes decrease, find routes in confined valley or channel networks, and, when sufficiently large, overwhelm the local topography. The magnitude-frequency distribution of both the actual landslides and the cellular automata model follow a power law for magnitudes higher than 10,000 m2 - 20,000 m2 and show a flattening of the slope for smaller magnitudes. The results provide strong corroborative evidence for physiographic limitations related to slope, slope distance and the distribution of mass within landslides. The physiographic controls on landslide magnitude, debris flow mobility and runout behavior is examined using detailed field and air photograph analysis. The role of slope on deposition and scour is investigated and a practical method for estimating both entrainment and runout in the field, as well as in the GIS environment, is presented. Further controls on landslide mobility, including the role of gullies and stream channels, roads and benches and intact forests, are considered. The role of landslides in controlling landscape physiography is also examined. In particular, it is determined that moderate-sized landslides do the most work transporting material on hillslopes, defined by a work peak, and that magnitude varies based on local physiography and climate. Landslides that form the work peak are distinct from catastrophic landslides that are themselves formative and system resetting. The persistence time for debris slides/debris flows and rock slides/rock avalanches is calculated over six orders of magnitude and an event is considered catastrophic when it persists in the landscape ten times longer than the population of landslides that form the work peak. A detailed case study examines meteorological controls on landslide occurrence and the role of extreme weather is considered. A critical onset of landslide triggering rainfall intensity is determined to be between 80 mm and 100 mm in 24 hours and wind is determined to result in increased local precipitation. The role of rain-on-snow is also evaluated and determined to be crucial to landslide occurrence. Finally, a conceptual model of landslide-induced denudation for coastal mountain watersheds spanning 10,000 years of environmental change is presented. Recent human impacts are calculated for landslide frequencies over the 20th century. The impact of logging during the last 100 years is unambiguous; logging induced landslides almost doubles the effect frequency of the wettest millennia in the last 10,000 years. This suggests that the impact of logging outpaces that of climatic change. Debris slides and debris flows are estimated to have resulted in a landscape lowering of 0.7 m across the Vancouver Island during the last 10,000 years.
机译:本文试图分析不列颠哥伦比亚省沿海地区降雨触发的滑坡的发生和行为。特别是,它着重于分析滑坡的时空分布及其大小,并考虑了影响区域滑坡行为的主要因素。该研究隐含的理解是,对卑诗省沿海地区的景观进行了管理,除了自然发生的山体滑坡还可能是由对人类重要的资源造成的,当然也有影响。每章的基础是通过更好地了解滑坡发生的原因和对滑坡发生的程度和程度的控制,我们可以减少影响并降低相关风险。统计量级-频率关系在BC省沿海地区进行了检查。观测表明,不列颠哥伦比亚省沿海地区的滑坡趋于增大,直至总面积约10,000平方米。此时,根据幂定律,较大的滑坡受到景观控制的限制。概率区域危害分析是幅度-频率分析的一种逻辑结果,并给出了温哥华岛的区域质量运动危害图。使用基于细胞自动机的模型对统计量-频率分布的生理控制进行了检查,其结果与实际滑坡行为相比具有优势:模拟的滑坡在局部高程处分叉,在局部坡度减小处优先沉积质量,在狭窄的山谷或河道网络中找到路线,并且当足够大时,会淹没局部地形。实际滑坡和元胞自动机模型的幅度-频率分布均遵循幂定律,其幅度大于10,000 m2-20,000 m2,并且在较小幅度时显示出坡度平坦。研究结果为与坡度,坡距和滑坡内质量分布有关的生理学局限性提供了有力的佐证。使用详细的野外和空中照片分析来检查对滑坡强度,泥石流流动性和跳动行为的生理控制。研究了坡度对沉积和冲刷的作用,并提出了一种估算野外以及GIS环境中夹带和跳动的实用方法。考虑了对滑坡流动性的进一步控制,包括沟渠和溪流,道路和长椅以及完整森林的作用。还检查了滑坡在控制景观生理方面的作用。特别是,确定了中等大小的滑坡在工作峰所定义的山坡上传输物质的工作最多,并且其幅度根据当地的生理和气候而变化。形成工作高峰的滑坡与本身具有形成性和系统重置作用的灾难性滑坡截然不同。计算碎片滑坡/泥石流和岩石滑坡/岩石雪崩的持续时间超过六个数量级,当事件在景观中的持续时间比构成工作高峰的滑坡人口的时间长十倍时,被认为是灾难性的。一个详细的案例研究检查了对滑坡发生的气象控制,并考虑了极端天气的作用。触发降雨强度的滑坡临界发作在24小时内被确定为介于80 mm和100 mm之间,并且确定为风以导致局部降水增加。雪上雨的作用也得到了评估,并确定对滑坡的发生至关重要。最后,提出了环境变化一万年的沿海山区流域滑坡诱发剥蚀的概念模型。计算了最近人类对20世纪滑坡频率的影响。在过去的100年中,伐木的影响是明确的;伐木引起的滑坡在过去的10,000年中几乎使最湿的千年的影响频率翻了一番。这表明伐木的影响超过了气候变化的影响。在过去的10,000年中,估计碎片滑坡和泥石流导致整个温哥华岛的景观降低了0.7 m。

著录项

  • 作者

    Guthrie, Richard Hamilton.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Waterloo (Canada).;

  • 授予单位 University of Waterloo (Canada).;
  • 学科 Environmental Geology.;Geomorphology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2009
  • 页码 193 p.
  • 总页数 193
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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