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References

Ronda Strauch edited this page Aug 5, 2019 · 14 revisions

We stand on the shoulders of giants (or giant landslides, or so it would seem).

USGS and related work

McGuire LA , FK Rengers, JW Kean, DM Staley, BB Mirus, Incorporating spatially heterogeneous infiltration capacity into hydrologic models with applications for simulating post‐wildfire debris flow initiation; Hydrological Processes 32 (9), 1173-1187; 2018

Mirus BB, RE Becker, RL Baum, JB Smith; Integrating real-time subsurface hydrologic monitoring with empirical rainfall thresholds to improve landslide early warning; Landslides, 1-11, 2018

Thomas MA , BB Mirus, BD Collins, N Lu, JW Godt Variability in soil-water retention properties and implications for physics-based simulation of landslide early warning criteria, Landslides, 1-13

Bessette-Kirton, E. K., Cerovski-Darriau, C., Schulz, W. H., Coe, J. A., Kean, J. W., Godt, J. W., ... & Hughes, K. S. Landslides Triggered by Hurricane Maria: Assessment of an Extreme Event in Puerto Rico. GSA Today, v. 29, https://doi.org/10.1130/GSATG383A.1. 2019.

ETH Zurich and related work

Lehmann, P., J. von Ruette, and D. Or (2018), How landslides become disasters , Eos, 99, https://doi.org/10.1029/2018EO104549. Published on 27 August 2018.

Fan, L., et al. (2017), Linking rainfall-induced landslides with debris flows runout patterns towards catchment scale hazard assessment, Geomorphology, 280, 1–15, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2016.10.007.

Lehmann, P., and D. Or (2012), Hydromechanical triggering of landslides: From progressive local failures to mass release, Water Resour. Res., 48, W03535, https://doi.org/10.1029/2011WR010947.

Rickenmann, D. (1999), Empirical relationships for debris flows, Nat. Hazards, 19, 47–77, https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1008064220727.

von Ruette, J., P. Lehmann, and D. Or (2013), Rainfall‐triggered shallow landslides at catchment scale: Threshold mechanics‐based modeling for abruptness and localization, Water Resour. Res., 49, 6,266–6,285, https://doi.org/10.1002/wrcr.20418.

FIRES

Joel B. Sankey Jason Kreitler Todd J. Hawbaker Jason L. McVay Mary Ellen Miller Erich R. Mueller Nicole M. Vaillant Scott E. Lowe Temuulen T. Sankey 2017 Geophysical Research Letters Volume 44, Issue 17 Research Letter Full Access Climate, wildfire, and erosion ensemble foretells more sediment in western USA watersheds https://doi.org/10.1002/2017GL073979

Landslides & Climate Change

Gariano, S. L., & Guzzetti, F. (2016). Landslides in a changing climate. Earth-Science Reviews, 162, 227-252.

Landslides in a changing climate SL Gariano, F Guzzetti - Earth-Science Reviews, 2016 - Elsevier Warming of the Earth climate system is unequivocal. That climate changes affect the stability of natural and engineered slopes and have consequences on landslides, is also undisputable. Less clear is the type, extent, magnitude and direction of the change

Landslide hazards and climate change: A perspective from the United States JA Coe - Slope safety preparedness for impact of climate …, 2017 - books.google.com “Human activities are changing Earth's climate.… The community of scientists has responsibilities to improve overall understanding of climate change and its impacts. Improvements will come from pursuing the research needed to understand climate change

Geotechnical Engineering in the Face of Climate Change: Role of Multi-Physics Processes in Partially Saturated Soils F Vahedifard, JM Williams, A AghaKouchak - IFCEE 2018, 2018 - ascelibrary.org Climate change is expected to alter the statistics of extreme events including rainfall storms, floods, droughts, and heatwaves. Climate-adaptive geotechnical structures warrant a quantitative assessment of the impacts of emerging and projected extreme patterns on (me - importance of considering climate change in designs)

Physically-based approach for rainfall-induced landslide projections in a changing climate D Salciarini, L Brocca, S Camici… - Proceedings of the …, 2019 - icevirtuallibrary.com In a changing climate, assessing the effects that the variation of the expected rainfalls can cause to slope stability is of primary importance. Precipitations are expected to increase, and, in particular, there will be more events characterized by extreme rainfalls, which

An approach to investigate the effects of climate change on landslide hazard at national scale (Romania) M Jurchescu, D Micu, M Sima, D Bălteanu… - Proceedings of the …, 2017 - geo.uaic.ro It is widely recognized that climate change is affecting slope stability. However, there is still a great knowledge gap on landslide-climate interaction, while in data-scarce regions, like Romania, it is even less clear how landslide occurrence probability will evolve in response