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Latest revision as of 11:21, 10 June 2024

Abstract

A combined ground-based slope stability radar (SSR) and satellite-based (InSAR) monitoring system was trialled at a remote mine site in the Northern Hemisphere in order to investigate relative changes in displacement experienced by a mine waste storage facility. The relative changes in displacements along the InSAR line-of-sight (LoS) were compared to the relative changes in displacement provided by the ground-based SSR LoS. Although the two LoS are different, this study showed good agreement between the magnitude of relative displacements observed by both remote sensing technologies on the slope of the facility. Additionally, the study looked at the effectiveness of InSAR and SSR on capturing relatively shallow operational works undertaken on the tailings storage facility slope. Results showed that SSR is able to provide near real-time information about progressive trends in displacements and alert mine site personnel of potential areas that might need attention. InSAR could detect anomalies in surface deformations during the period when SSR did, but the radar signal was sufficiently low to not unequivocally attribute these responses to real surface deformations

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Published on 10/06/24
Submitted on 10/06/24

Volume Real-time monitoring of natural and human-made landforms, 2024
DOI: 10.23967/isc.2024.059
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license

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