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Human Settlement Pressure Drives Slow‐Moving Landslide Exposure
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AbstractA rapidly growing population across mountain regions is pressuring expansion onto steeper slopes, leading to increased exposure of people and their assets to slow‐moving landslides. These moving hillslopes can inflict damage to buildings and infrastructure, accelerate with urban alterations, and catastrophically fail with climatic and weather extremes. Yet, systematic estimates of slow‐moving landslide exposure and their drivers have been elusive. Here, we present a new global database of 7,764 large (A ≥ 0.1 km2) slow‐moving landslides across nine IPCC regions. Using high‐resolution human settlement footprint data, we identify 563 inhabited landslides. We estimate that 9% of reported slow‐moving landslides are inhabited, in a given basin, and have 12% of their areas occupied by human settlements, on average. We find the density of settlements on unstable slopes decreases in basins more affected by slow‐moving landslides, but varies across regions with greater flood exposure. Across most regions, urbanization can be a relevant driver of slow‐moving landslide exposure, while steepness and flood exposure have regionally varying influences. In East Asia, slow‐moving landslide exposure increases with urbanization, gentler slopes, and less flood exposure. Our findings quantify how disparate knowledge creates uncertainty that undermines an assessment of the drivers of slow‐moving landslide exposure in mountain regions, facing a future of rising risk, such as Central Asia, Northeast Africa, and the Tibetan Plateau.
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Joaquin V. Ferrer
Guilherme Samprogna Mohor
Olivier Dewitte
Tomáš Pánek
Cristina Reyes‐Carmona
Alexander L. Handwerger
Marcel Hürlimann
Lisa Köhler
Kanayim Teshebaeva
Annegret H. Thieken
Ching‐Ying Tsou
Alexandra Urgilez Vinueza
Valentino Demurtas
Yi Zhang
Chaoying Zhao
Norbert Marwan
Jürgen Kurths
Oliver Korup
Title: Human Settlement Pressure Drives Slow‐Moving Landslide Exposure
Description:
AbstractA rapidly growing population across mountain regions is pressuring expansion onto steeper slopes, leading to increased exposure of people and their assets to slow‐moving landslides.
These moving hillslopes can inflict damage to buildings and infrastructure, accelerate with urban alterations, and catastrophically fail with climatic and weather extremes.
Yet, systematic estimates of slow‐moving landslide exposure and their drivers have been elusive.
Here, we present a new global database of 7,764 large (A ≥ 0.
1 km2) slow‐moving landslides across nine IPCC regions.
Using high‐resolution human settlement footprint data, we identify 563 inhabited landslides.
We estimate that 9% of reported slow‐moving landslides are inhabited, in a given basin, and have 12% of their areas occupied by human settlements, on average.
We find the density of settlements on unstable slopes decreases in basins more affected by slow‐moving landslides, but varies across regions with greater flood exposure.
Across most regions, urbanization can be a relevant driver of slow‐moving landslide exposure, while steepness and flood exposure have regionally varying influences.
In East Asia, slow‐moving landslide exposure increases with urbanization, gentler slopes, and less flood exposure.
Our findings quantify how disparate knowledge creates uncertainty that undermines an assessment of the drivers of slow‐moving landslide exposure in mountain regions, facing a future of rising risk, such as Central Asia, Northeast Africa, and the Tibetan Plateau.
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