Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia

Slope failures on transportation routes can kill or injure motorists, derail trains, damage vehicles, roads and railways, delay traffic, and incur expense to transportation authorities. In southwestern British Columbia, Highways 1 and 99, the British Columbia Railway, the Canadian National Railwa...

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Main Author: Hazzard, Jennifer
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8933
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-89332018-01-05T17:34:29Z Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia Hazzard, Jennifer Slope failures on transportation routes can kill or injure motorists, derail trains, damage vehicles, roads and railways, delay traffic, and incur expense to transportation authorities. In southwestern British Columbia, Highways 1 and 99, the British Columbia Railway, the Canadian National Railway, and the Canadian Pacific Railway all traverse mountainous terrain, and as a result are susceptible to a variety of slope hazards. By quantitatively estimating risk at various areas along a transportation route, high-risk areas can be identified, risks can be compared with values accepted by society, remedial programs can be more effectively designed, and their success can be monitored. A database of 3287 slope failure records was compiled for the five routes mentioned above. Of these, 1764 records include volume estimates. The effects of data censoring were reduced by examining spatial and temporal patterns in landslide reporting for failures of different magnitudes on various sections of each route. Magnitude-cumulative frequency relationships were plotted for both rock falls and debris flows on each route. The rock fall relationships each display a power-law distribution for events greater than 1 m³, and are very similar in form over several orders of magnitude. Geological conditions along the routes influence the slope of the magnitude-cumulative frequency slopes. Risk of death due to slope failure on several route segments was calculated using the magnitude-frequency relationships. The estimates of annual probability of death due to rock fall range from 0.008 to 0.10, and are below the upper limits of several risk acceptability criteria. Debris flow risk estimates are less reliable, due to the limited data set. The greatest contribution to risk to life is generally from intermediate rock falls in the Fraser Canyon (1 to 10 m³), and larger rock falls in Howe Sound and the Fraser Lowland (100 to 1000 m³). Science, Faculty of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of Graduate 2009-06-11T17:17:42Z 2009-06-11T17:17:42Z 1998 1999-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8933 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 9953578 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description Slope failures on transportation routes can kill or injure motorists, derail trains, damage vehicles, roads and railways, delay traffic, and incur expense to transportation authorities. In southwestern British Columbia, Highways 1 and 99, the British Columbia Railway, the Canadian National Railway, and the Canadian Pacific Railway all traverse mountainous terrain, and as a result are susceptible to a variety of slope hazards. By quantitatively estimating risk at various areas along a transportation route, high-risk areas can be identified, risks can be compared with values accepted by society, remedial programs can be more effectively designed, and their success can be monitored. A database of 3287 slope failure records was compiled for the five routes mentioned above. Of these, 1764 records include volume estimates. The effects of data censoring were reduced by examining spatial and temporal patterns in landslide reporting for failures of different magnitudes on various sections of each route. Magnitude-cumulative frequency relationships were plotted for both rock falls and debris flows on each route. The rock fall relationships each display a power-law distribution for events greater than 1 m³, and are very similar in form over several orders of magnitude. Geological conditions along the routes influence the slope of the magnitude-cumulative frequency slopes. Risk of death due to slope failure on several route segments was calculated using the magnitude-frequency relationships. The estimates of annual probability of death due to rock fall range from 0.008 to 0.10, and are below the upper limits of several risk acceptability criteria. Debris flow risk estimates are less reliable, due to the limited data set. The greatest contribution to risk to life is generally from intermediate rock falls in the Fraser Canyon (1 to 10 m³), and larger rock falls in Howe Sound and the Fraser Lowland (100 to 1000 m³). === Science, Faculty of === Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of === Graduate
author Hazzard, Jennifer
spellingShingle Hazzard, Jennifer
Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia
author_facet Hazzard, Jennifer
author_sort Hazzard, Jennifer
title Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia
title_short Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia
title_full Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia
title_fullStr Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern British Columbia
title_sort risk analysis of landslides affecting major transportation corridors in southwestern british columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8933
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