Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events

Rainfall-induced landslides represent a pervasive issue in areas where extreme rainfall intersects complex terrain. A farsighted management of landslide risk requires assessing how landslide hazard will change in coming decades and thus requires, inter alia, that we understand what rainfall events a...

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Main Authors: Michela Biasutti, Richard Seager, Dalia B. Kirschbaum
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-12-01
Series:Weather and Climate Extremes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221209471630024X
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spelling doaj-379501addf784f39b9d56aa108d1ea782020-11-25T01:57:55ZengElsevierWeather and Climate Extremes2212-09472016-12-0114C677910.1016/j.wace.2016.11.004Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather eventsMichela Biasutti0Richard Seager1Dalia B. Kirschbaum2Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, NY, USALamont-Doherty Earth Observatory of Columbia University, Palisades, NY, USAHydrological Sciences Lab at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USARainfall-induced landslides represent a pervasive issue in areas where extreme rainfall intersects complex terrain. A farsighted management of landslide risk requires assessing how landslide hazard will change in coming decades and thus requires, inter alia, that we understand what rainfall events are most likely to trigger landslides and how global warming will affect the frequency of such weather events. We take advantage of 9 years of landslide occurrence data compiled by collating Google news reports and of a high-resolution satellite-based daily rainfall data to investigate what weather triggers landslide along the West Coast US. We show that, while this landslide compilation cannot provide consistent and widespread monitoring everywhere, it captures enough of the events in the major urban areas that it can be used to identify the relevant relationships between landslides and rainfall events in Puget Sound, the Bay Area, and greater Los Angeles. In all these regions, days that recorded landslides have rainfall distributions that are skewed away from dry and low-rainfall accumulations and towards heavy intensities. However, large daily accumulation is the main driver of enhanced hazard of landslides only in Puget Sound. There, landslide are often clustered in space and time and major events are primarily driven by synoptic scale variability, namely “atmospheric rivers” of high humidity air hitting anywhere along the West Coast, and the interaction of frontal system with the coastal orography. The relationship between landslide occurrences and daily rainfall is less robust in California, where antecedent precipitation (in the case of the Bay area) and the peak intensity of localized downpours at sub-daily time scales (in the case of Los Angeles) are key factors not captured by the same-day accumulations. Accordingly, we suggest that the assessment of future changes in landslide hazard for the entire the West Coast requires consideration of future changes in the occurrence and intensity of atmospheric rivers, in their duration and clustering, and in the occurrence of short-duration (sub-daily) extreme rainfall as well. Major regional landslide events, in which multiple occurrences are recorded in the catalog for the same day, are too rare to allow a statistical characterization of their triggering events, but a case study analysis indicates that a variety of synoptic-scale events can be involved, including not only atmospheric rivers but also broader cold- and warm-front precipitation. That a news-based catalog of landslides is accurate enough to allow the identification of different landslide/rainfall relationships in the major urban areas along the US West Coast suggests that this technology can potentially be used for other English-language cities and could become an even more powerful tool if expanded to other languages and non-traditional news sources, such as social media.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221209471630024XLandslidesIntense rainfallClimate change impacts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michela Biasutti
Richard Seager
Dalia B. Kirschbaum
spellingShingle Michela Biasutti
Richard Seager
Dalia B. Kirschbaum
Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events
Weather and Climate Extremes
Landslides
Intense rainfall
Climate change impacts
author_facet Michela Biasutti
Richard Seager
Dalia B. Kirschbaum
author_sort Michela Biasutti
title Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events
title_short Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events
title_full Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events
title_fullStr Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events
title_full_unstemmed Landslides in West Coast metropolitan areas: The role of extreme weather events
title_sort landslides in west coast metropolitan areas: the role of extreme weather events
publisher Elsevier
series Weather and Climate Extremes
issn 2212-0947
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Rainfall-induced landslides represent a pervasive issue in areas where extreme rainfall intersects complex terrain. A farsighted management of landslide risk requires assessing how landslide hazard will change in coming decades and thus requires, inter alia, that we understand what rainfall events are most likely to trigger landslides and how global warming will affect the frequency of such weather events. We take advantage of 9 years of landslide occurrence data compiled by collating Google news reports and of a high-resolution satellite-based daily rainfall data to investigate what weather triggers landslide along the West Coast US. We show that, while this landslide compilation cannot provide consistent and widespread monitoring everywhere, it captures enough of the events in the major urban areas that it can be used to identify the relevant relationships between landslides and rainfall events in Puget Sound, the Bay Area, and greater Los Angeles. In all these regions, days that recorded landslides have rainfall distributions that are skewed away from dry and low-rainfall accumulations and towards heavy intensities. However, large daily accumulation is the main driver of enhanced hazard of landslides only in Puget Sound. There, landslide are often clustered in space and time and major events are primarily driven by synoptic scale variability, namely “atmospheric rivers” of high humidity air hitting anywhere along the West Coast, and the interaction of frontal system with the coastal orography. The relationship between landslide occurrences and daily rainfall is less robust in California, where antecedent precipitation (in the case of the Bay area) and the peak intensity of localized downpours at sub-daily time scales (in the case of Los Angeles) are key factors not captured by the same-day accumulations. Accordingly, we suggest that the assessment of future changes in landslide hazard for the entire the West Coast requires consideration of future changes in the occurrence and intensity of atmospheric rivers, in their duration and clustering, and in the occurrence of short-duration (sub-daily) extreme rainfall as well. Major regional landslide events, in which multiple occurrences are recorded in the catalog for the same day, are too rare to allow a statistical characterization of their triggering events, but a case study analysis indicates that a variety of synoptic-scale events can be involved, including not only atmospheric rivers but also broader cold- and warm-front precipitation. That a news-based catalog of landslides is accurate enough to allow the identification of different landslide/rainfall relationships in the major urban areas along the US West Coast suggests that this technology can potentially be used for other English-language cities and could become an even more powerful tool if expanded to other languages and non-traditional news sources, such as social media.
topic Landslides
Intense rainfall
Climate change impacts
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221209471630024X
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