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A phenomenological interpretation of the slope factors and lanslide mechanism represents the first stage for the assessment of landslide hazard at the slope scale. This requires processing, analysing and integrating a large set of multidisciplinary and heterogeneous data, obtained through diverse activities, among which: geological and geomorphological studies, geotechnical investigations and monitoring, topographic and structural damage surveys. The integration of such a variety of multisource data, to build up a sound conceptual model of the slope, can be particularly challenging, especially in geohydromechanical contexts characterised by a great spatial variability of soil properties and complex hydraulic boundary conditions, such as in the case of slopes composed of turbiditic formations. This paper presents a new methodological approach for the study of landslide hazard at the slope scale, based on the combined use of an open-source GIS platform and an in-house developed dashboard for the interactive visualisation and analysis of geotechnical laboratory data. The details of the GIS project and the potentiality of the data-analysis dashboard are described, highlighting the interoperability between the two digital tools. The proposed methodology is applied to a pilot site, the Pianello area in Bovino, in the souhteastern Apennines, a widely investigated hillslope composed of tectonised clayey turbidite, hosting a complex basin of slow-moving landslides.
 
A phenomenological interpretation of the slope factors and lanslide mechanism represents the first stage for the assessment of landslide hazard at the slope scale. This requires processing, analysing and integrating a large set of multidisciplinary and heterogeneous data, obtained through diverse activities, among which: geological and geomorphological studies, geotechnical investigations and monitoring, topographic and structural damage surveys. The integration of such a variety of multisource data, to build up a sound conceptual model of the slope, can be particularly challenging, especially in geohydromechanical contexts characterised by a great spatial variability of soil properties and complex hydraulic boundary conditions, such as in the case of slopes composed of turbiditic formations. This paper presents a new methodological approach for the study of landslide hazard at the slope scale, based on the combined use of an open-source GIS platform and an in-house developed dashboard for the interactive visualisation and analysis of geotechnical laboratory data. The details of the GIS project and the potentiality of the data-analysis dashboard are described, highlighting the interoperability between the two digital tools. The proposed methodology is applied to a pilot site, the Pianello area in Bovino, in the souhteastern Apennines, a widely investigated hillslope composed of tectonised clayey turbidite, hosting a complex basin of slow-moving landslides.
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== Full Paper ==
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<pdf>Media:Draft_Sanchez Pinedo_278806317243.pdf</pdf>

Revision as of 14:06, 7 June 2024

Abstract

A phenomenological interpretation of the slope factors and lanslide mechanism represents the first stage for the assessment of landslide hazard at the slope scale. This requires processing, analysing and integrating a large set of multidisciplinary and heterogeneous data, obtained through diverse activities, among which: geological and geomorphological studies, geotechnical investigations and monitoring, topographic and structural damage surveys. The integration of such a variety of multisource data, to build up a sound conceptual model of the slope, can be particularly challenging, especially in geohydromechanical contexts characterised by a great spatial variability of soil properties and complex hydraulic boundary conditions, such as in the case of slopes composed of turbiditic formations. This paper presents a new methodological approach for the study of landslide hazard at the slope scale, based on the combined use of an open-source GIS platform and an in-house developed dashboard for the interactive visualisation and analysis of geotechnical laboratory data. The details of the GIS project and the potentiality of the data-analysis dashboard are described, highlighting the interoperability between the two digital tools. The proposed methodology is applied to a pilot site, the Pianello area in Bovino, in the souhteastern Apennines, a widely investigated hillslope composed of tectonised clayey turbidite, hosting a complex basin of slow-moving landslides.

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Published on 07/06/24
Submitted on 07/06/24

Volume Innovation in DMT & SDMT testing, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.243
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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