Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Rockfall susceptibility and runout in the Valley of the Kings
View through CrossRef
AbstractThe UNESCO world heritage site Valley of the Kings or Wadi el-Moluk (وادي الملوك) near Luxor, Egypt, hosts unique burial places of Egyptian kings and royals from the New Kingdom (c. 1539–1075 BCE) and attracts about 0.5 to 2 million tourists per year. Very steep to subvertical cliffs of Thebes Limestone surround the Valley of the Kings. The rock mass is cut by frequent joints and faults making the cliff walls prone to rockfalls. However, only few rockfall debris are found in the valley, likely due to natural remobilisation by flood events and artificial clearings and excavation works that rendered the natural debris cover over the millennia. This work focuses on rockfall susceptibility and runout and makes use of new high-resolution landscape surface models utilising terrestrial laser scanning. We investigated rockfall release areas by exploring rock mass fractures at 23 cliff segments and analysed the kinematics of potential rockfalls. Furthermore, we estimated potential rockfall deposition areas with CONEFALL supported by nine numerical simulations of single rockfall events using Rockyfor3D. We found that nearly 4500 m2 (26%) of the public walking paths and 24 out of 64 tomb entrance areas locate within potential rockfall runout zones.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Rockfall susceptibility and runout in the Valley of the Kings
Description:
AbstractThe UNESCO world heritage site Valley of the Kings or Wadi el-Moluk (وادي الملوك) near Luxor, Egypt, hosts unique burial places of Egyptian kings and royals from the New Kingdom (c.
1539–1075 BCE) and attracts about 0.
5 to 2 million tourists per year.
Very steep to subvertical cliffs of Thebes Limestone surround the Valley of the Kings.
The rock mass is cut by frequent joints and faults making the cliff walls prone to rockfalls.
However, only few rockfall debris are found in the valley, likely due to natural remobilisation by flood events and artificial clearings and excavation works that rendered the natural debris cover over the millennia.
This work focuses on rockfall susceptibility and runout and makes use of new high-resolution landscape surface models utilising terrestrial laser scanning.
We investigated rockfall release areas by exploring rock mass fractures at 23 cliff segments and analysed the kinematics of potential rockfalls.
Furthermore, we estimated potential rockfall deposition areas with CONEFALL supported by nine numerical simulations of single rockfall events using Rockyfor3D.
We found that nearly 4500 m2 (26%) of the public walking paths and 24 out of 64 tomb entrance areas locate within potential rockfall runout zones.
Related Results
Rockfall Barrier Testing in an Open Pit Mine: Comparing Empirical and Modeled Rockfall Dynamics
Rockfall Barrier Testing in an Open Pit Mine: Comparing Empirical and Modeled Rockfall Dynamics
ABSTRACT:
Rockfalls pose severe hazards to miners and infrastructure in open pit mines, and rockfall barrier systems are an increasingly common method for mitigat...
The regional rockfall susceptibility of road based on 267 rockfall events in Tai-Hang Mountains, China
The regional rockfall susceptibility of road based on 267 rockfall events in Tai-Hang Mountains, China
Abstract
Rockfall disasters are widely developed along highways in Tai-hang Mountains. The rockfall is difficult to predict effectively because of its sudden, which brings ...
Large rockfall detection, location and characterization using broadband seismic records: A case study of Hongya rockfall
Large rockfall detection, location and characterization using broadband seismic records: A case study of Hongya rockfall
Large rockfalls often cause huge economic losses and casualties in densely populated mountain areas. Timely acquiring information on a large rockfall can help promptly assess the d...
Modelling fragmentation in rockfalls
Modelling fragmentation in rockfalls
The fragmentation process in rockfalls is a complex phenomenon that is not well understood and only a few rockfall simulation models consider it explicitly. Fragmentation significa...
Quantifying Topographic Influences on Rockfall Trajectories in Open Pit Mines Using Stochastic Rockfall Modeling
Quantifying Topographic Influences on Rockfall Trajectories in Open Pit Mines Using Stochastic Rockfall Modeling
ABSTRACT:
Rockfall remains one of the most critical and least understood hazards faced in open pit mining. The factors controlling when and where rockfalls occur ...
Risk evaluation of rockfall disaster in the cave entrance of western mountain railway tunnels based on the improved G1-EWM-UMT model
Risk evaluation of rockfall disaster in the cave entrance of western mountain railway tunnels based on the improved G1-EWM-UMT model
Abstract
To avoid the impact of rockfall on railroad safety, it is crucial to accurately predict the risk level of rockfall disaster in advance for the safe construction, o...
Using dendrogeomorphic and lichenometric approaches for rockfall analysis in the high mountains of Central Mexico
Using dendrogeomorphic and lichenometric approaches for rockfall analysis in the high mountains of Central Mexico
Rockfall represents one of the most destructive geomorphic processes for infrastructure and settlements located at the foot of mountain slopes. Furthermore, it poses a hazard for v...
Rockfall Hazard Evaluation in a Cultural Heritage Site: Case Study of Agia Paraskevi Monastery, Monodendri, Greece
Rockfall Hazard Evaluation in a Cultural Heritage Site: Case Study of Agia Paraskevi Monastery, Monodendri, Greece
Rockfall is considered the main geohazard in mountainous areas with steep morphology. The main objective of this study is to assess the rockfall hazard in the cultural heritage sit...

