Rockfall simulation on a rock slope along E75 road at km 890+725 to 891+093

ce/papers ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 269-274
Author(s):  
B. ABOLMASOV ◽  
M. MARJANOVIĆ ◽  
S. MILENKOVIĆ ◽  
M. PEJIĆ ◽  
Z. BERISAVLJEVIĆ

Author(s):  
Jesse W. Davis ◽  
Abdul Shakoor

The effectiveness of catchment ditches along Ohio roadways was evaluated for 100 sites with the Oregon Rockfall Hazard Rating System (RHRS), the New York State Rock Slope Rating Procedure (RSRP), the Colorado Rockfall Simulation Program (CRSP), and the Oregon Rockfall Catchment Area Design Guide. From the results of this evaluation, 48% of the ditches were ranked as adequate within an acceptable level of risk, 28% were ranked as marginally adequate, and 24% were ranked as inadequate. Although qualitative in nature, the ditch evaluation portion of the Oregon RHRS was found useful. None of the ditches evaluated met the Ritchie ditch depth criteria as used in RSRP. CRSP provided valuable information when the entire road cut was accessible for data collection. Because of slope height restrictions, the Oregon Rockfall Catchment Area Design Guide provided ditch evaluations for only 44% of the sites.





Author(s):  
Flávio Affonso Ferreira Filho ◽  
Romero César Gomes ◽  
Teófilo Aquino Vieira da Costa


Author(s):  
Yunming Aocun ◽  
Yapin Lv ◽  
Qingan Wang ◽  
Tianwei Xia




Author(s):  
Zhihong Dong ◽  
Xiuli Ding ◽  
Shuling Huang ◽  
Yongjin Wu ◽  
Aiqing Wu


Landslides ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chiara Crippa ◽  
Elena Valbuzzi ◽  
Paolo Frattini ◽  
Giovanni B. Crosta ◽  
Margherita C. Spreafico ◽  
...  

AbstractLarge slow rock-slope deformations, including deep-seated gravitational slope deformations and large landslides, are widespread in alpine environments. They develop over thousands of years by progressive failure, resulting in slow movements that impact infrastructures and can eventually evolve into catastrophic rockslides. A robust characterization of their style of activity is thus required in a risk management perspective. We combine an original inventory of slow rock-slope deformations with different PS-InSAR and SqueeSAR datasets to develop a novel, semi-automated approach to characterize and classify 208 slow rock-slope deformations in Lombardia (Italian Central Alps) based on their displacement rate, kinematics, heterogeneity and morphometric expression. Through a peak analysis of displacement rate distributions, we characterize the segmentation of mapped landslides and highlight the occurrence of nested sectors with differential activity and displacement rates. Combining 2D decomposition of InSAR velocity vectors and machine learning classification, we develop an automatic approach to characterize the kinematics of each landslide. Then, we sequentially combine principal component and K-medoids cluster analyses to identify groups of slow rock-slope deformations with consistent styles of activity. Our methodology is readily applicable to different landslide datasets and provides an objective and cost-effective support to land planning and the prioritization of local-scale studies aimed at granting safety and infrastructure integrity.



2021 ◽  
Vol 287 ◽  
pp. 106114
Author(s):  
Zezhuo Song ◽  
Jin Liu ◽  
Yongxiang Yu ◽  
Shefeng Hao ◽  
Bo Jiang ◽  
...  


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