Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data

This thesis represents a large body of work that seeks to describe, quantify, and simulate the behaviour of large rock slope failures (> 1 Mm³), in the form of landslides and rock avalanches, and their secondary processes, such as landslide-dammed lakes, utilizing remotely sensed data. Remotely s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Delaney, Keith Brian
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Waterloo 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8633
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spelling ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/8633 2023-05-15T18:49:02+02:00 Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data Delaney, Keith Brian 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8633 en eng University of Waterloo http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8633 Landslides Geographical Information Systems Earth Sciences Remote Sensing Digital Elevation Models Outburst Floods Doctoral Thesis 2014 ftunivwaterloo 2022-06-18T23:00:06Z This thesis represents a large body of work that seeks to describe, quantify, and simulate the behaviour of large rock slope failures (> 1 Mm³), in the form of landslides and rock avalanches, and their secondary processes, such as landslide-dammed lakes, utilizing remotely sensed data. Remotely sensed data includes aerial photography, high resolution satellite imagery from various platforms (e.g. LANDSAT, ASTER, EO-1, SPOT), and digital topographic elevation models of the Earth’s surface (e.g. SRTM-3, ASTER GDEM2, LiDAR). This thesis focused on regions in northwest North America (British Columbia, Yukon Territory, and Alaska), and on regions in the Himalaya and Pamirs Mountain chains (Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tibet, and India). These study regions are each highly dynamic landscapes, where the occurrence of rock slope failures per area is higher than non-mountainous regions, and these events are aiding to the shape and profile of the landscapes and surfaces found today. This thesis focuses on: 1) the ability to accurately calculate geometrics (e.g. areas, volumes, runouts, debris depths) for large scale landslides and their associated landslide dammed lakes (e.g. areas, volumes, outbursts), utilizing data from remotely sensed sources; 2) the attempt to successfully simulate the observed dynamics for both landslide emplacement and their resulting debris deposits (DAN-W, DAN3D), and possible outburst flood scenarios (FLO2D); and, 3) attempt to quantify the kinetic and specific energy involved in rock avalanches, and how these energetics relate to fragmentation, as well as the lateral spreading and thinning of debris sheets. The river valleys of the northwest Himalayas (Pakistan and India) and the adjacent Pamirs Mountains of Afghanistan and Tajikistan contain in excess of two hundred known rockslide deposits of unknown age that have interrupted surface drainage and previously dammed major rivers in the region in recent and prehistoric time. Some prehistoric rockslide dams in the northwest Himalayas ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Alaska Yukon University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftunivwaterloo
language English
topic Landslides
Geographical Information Systems
Earth Sciences
Remote Sensing
Digital Elevation Models
Outburst Floods
spellingShingle Landslides
Geographical Information Systems
Earth Sciences
Remote Sensing
Digital Elevation Models
Outburst Floods
Delaney, Keith Brian
Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data
topic_facet Landslides
Geographical Information Systems
Earth Sciences
Remote Sensing
Digital Elevation Models
Outburst Floods
description This thesis represents a large body of work that seeks to describe, quantify, and simulate the behaviour of large rock slope failures (> 1 Mm³), in the form of landslides and rock avalanches, and their secondary processes, such as landslide-dammed lakes, utilizing remotely sensed data. Remotely sensed data includes aerial photography, high resolution satellite imagery from various platforms (e.g. LANDSAT, ASTER, EO-1, SPOT), and digital topographic elevation models of the Earth’s surface (e.g. SRTM-3, ASTER GDEM2, LiDAR). This thesis focused on regions in northwest North America (British Columbia, Yukon Territory, and Alaska), and on regions in the Himalaya and Pamirs Mountain chains (Tajikistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Tibet, and India). These study regions are each highly dynamic landscapes, where the occurrence of rock slope failures per area is higher than non-mountainous regions, and these events are aiding to the shape and profile of the landscapes and surfaces found today. This thesis focuses on: 1) the ability to accurately calculate geometrics (e.g. areas, volumes, runouts, debris depths) for large scale landslides and their associated landslide dammed lakes (e.g. areas, volumes, outbursts), utilizing data from remotely sensed sources; 2) the attempt to successfully simulate the observed dynamics for both landslide emplacement and their resulting debris deposits (DAN-W, DAN3D), and possible outburst flood scenarios (FLO2D); and, 3) attempt to quantify the kinetic and specific energy involved in rock avalanches, and how these energetics relate to fragmentation, as well as the lateral spreading and thinning of debris sheets. The river valleys of the northwest Himalayas (Pakistan and India) and the adjacent Pamirs Mountains of Afghanistan and Tajikistan contain in excess of two hundred known rockslide deposits of unknown age that have interrupted surface drainage and previously dammed major rivers in the region in recent and prehistoric time. Some prehistoric rockslide dams in the northwest Himalayas ...
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Delaney, Keith Brian
author_facet Delaney, Keith Brian
author_sort Delaney, Keith Brian
title Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data
title_short Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data
title_full Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data
title_fullStr Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation and Analysis of Catastrophic Landslides and Related Processes using Digital Topographic Data
title_sort characterisation and analysis of catastrophic landslides and related processes using digital topographic data
publisher University of Waterloo
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8633
geographic Yukon
geographic_facet Yukon
genre Alaska
Yukon
genre_facet Alaska
Yukon
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/8633
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