The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence

The wettest 2018 long rainy season (March to May (MAM)) resulted in daily intensive rainfall events in East Africa that have seriously affected the environment and economy in many countries. Land subsidence is one of the environmental disasters that has occurred due to the long rainy season in Kenya...

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Main Authors: Ashraf Rateb, ElSayed Hermas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-04-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/9/1390
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spelling doaj-d22cfd590db045f5b86f0f314fbf688d2020-11-25T02:22:56ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922020-04-01121390139010.3390/rs12091390The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land SubsidenceAshraf Rateb0ElSayed Hermas1Bureau of Economic Geology, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78758, USAThe Division of Geologic Applications and Mineral Resources, The National Authority for Remote Sensing and Space Sciences (NARSS), Cairo 1564, EgyptThe wettest 2018 long rainy season (March to May (MAM)) resulted in daily intensive rainfall events in East Africa that have seriously affected the environment and economy in many countries. Land subsidence is one of the environmental disasters that has occurred due to the long rainy season in Kenya for many years. However, it has received limited scientific attention. In this paper, we incorporate hydrological (soil moisture active–passive (SMAP) and loading models) and geodetic data (global positioning system (GPS) and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR)) to study hydrological changes and their associated subsidence potential in Kenya. Results show that widespread subsidence of more than 20 mm was associated with the MAM season in Kenya during 2018, based on SBAS InSAR measurements. The high values of land subsidence were well correlated with the areas of intense flooding during the MAM season. The widespread subsidence during the wet season has implications for the stability of the earth’s surface during the season rather than creating the possibility of potential stresses along active faults. These stresses may trigger seismicity that is expected to pose risks to urban features. The results of the current study can help governmental authorities to adopt proper urban planning that avoids or minimizes the risks of land subsidence in the areas of sinkholes.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/9/1390floodland subsidenceEast AfricaKenyaSMAPInSAR
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ashraf Rateb
ElSayed Hermas
spellingShingle Ashraf Rateb
ElSayed Hermas
The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence
Remote Sensing
flood
land subsidence
East Africa
Kenya
SMAP
InSAR
author_facet Ashraf Rateb
ElSayed Hermas
author_sort Ashraf Rateb
title The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence
title_short The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence
title_full The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence
title_fullStr The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence
title_full_unstemmed The 2018 Long Rainy Season in Kenya: Hydrological Changes and Correlated Land Subsidence
title_sort 2018 long rainy season in kenya: hydrological changes and correlated land subsidence
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2020-04-01
description The wettest 2018 long rainy season (March to May (MAM)) resulted in daily intensive rainfall events in East Africa that have seriously affected the environment and economy in many countries. Land subsidence is one of the environmental disasters that has occurred due to the long rainy season in Kenya for many years. However, it has received limited scientific attention. In this paper, we incorporate hydrological (soil moisture active–passive (SMAP) and loading models) and geodetic data (global positioning system (GPS) and interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR)) to study hydrological changes and their associated subsidence potential in Kenya. Results show that widespread subsidence of more than 20 mm was associated with the MAM season in Kenya during 2018, based on SBAS InSAR measurements. The high values of land subsidence were well correlated with the areas of intense flooding during the MAM season. The widespread subsidence during the wet season has implications for the stability of the earth’s surface during the season rather than creating the possibility of potential stresses along active faults. These stresses may trigger seismicity that is expected to pose risks to urban features. The results of the current study can help governmental authorities to adopt proper urban planning that avoids or minimizes the risks of land subsidence in the areas of sinkholes.
topic flood
land subsidence
East Africa
Kenya
SMAP
InSAR
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/9/1390
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