Evolution of soil wetting patterns preceding a hydrologically induced landslide inferred from electrical resistivity survey and local measurements of volumetric water content and pore water presure

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_46582D7AAE0E
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Evolution of soil wetting patterns preceding a hydrologically induced landslide inferred from electrical resistivity survey and local measurements of volumetric water content and pore water presure
Journal
Water Resources Research
Author(s)
Lehmann P., Gambazzi F., Suski B., Baron L., Askarinejad A., Springman S., Holliger K., Or D.
ISSN
0043-1397
ISSN-L
0043-1397
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2013
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
49
Pages
7992-8004
Language
english
Notes
Lehmann
Abstract
The hydrological state of a hillslope prior to a sprinkling-induced
shallow landslide was monitored using electrical resistivity tomography
(ERT) along a 47-m-long transect, supplemented by local time-domain
reflectometry (TDR) and tensiometer measurements. The spatial and
temporal evolution of wetting patterns in the soil material indicated
attainment of a stationary fully saturated profile in a slope region
underlain by shallow sandstone bedrock. The significant decrease
in spatially averaged standard deviation of water saturation has
not been observed during an earlier failed attempt to trigger a landslide
by intense sprinkling. While for the ‘stable' experiment (no landslide
was triggered) water saturation and soil moisture variability were
still increasing with time, the ‘unstable' experiment reached a time-invariant
state of high pore water pressures and saturations, until it finally
failed. The results indicate that when large and interconnected regions
of hillslope are saturated (as confirmed by high volumetric water
content and low standard deviation of water saturation), additional
water cannot be redistributed to empty drier regions and may eventually
enhance local pore water pressure and seepage force, initiating large
shear deformation and failure. Accordingly, a transition to such
a critical steady state of high average water saturation, associated
with low and constant spatial standard deviation, may serve as additional
hydro-geophysical indicator for the imminence of a landslide release.
Keywords
rapid landslides, hillslope hydrology, electrical resistivity tomography, , wetting pattern
Create date
25/11/2013 19:40
Last modification date
03/02/2023 8:01
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