4.7 Article

Canelles landslide: modelling rapid drawdown and fast potential sliding

Journal

LANDSLIDES
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages 33-51

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10346-011-0264-x

Keywords

Landslide; Analysis; Modelling; Finite elements; Stabilisation; Rapid drawdown; Fast sliding

Funding

  1. Commission of the European Communities [226479]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Science [BIA2008-06614]

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A large landslide (40 x 10(6)m(3)) was reactivated on the left bank of Canelles reservoir, Spain. The instability was made evident after a considerable reduction of the reservoir level. The drawdown took place during the summer of 2006 after several years of high water levels. The drawdown velocity reached values between 0.5 and 1.2m/day (registered at low elevations). The paper reports the geological and geotechnical investigations performed to define the movement. The geometry of the slip surface was established from the detailed analysis of the continuous cores recovered in deep borings and from limited information provided by inclinometers. Deep piezometric records provided also valuable information on the pore water pressure in the vicinity of the failure surface. These data allowed validating a flow-deformation coupled calculation model, which takes into account the changes in water level that occurred 4 years previous to the failure as well as the average rainfall. The analysis indicates that the most likely reason for the instability is the rapid drawdown that took place during the summer of 2006. The potential sudden acceleration of the slide is also analysed in the paper introducing coupled thermal hydraulic and mechanical effects that may develop at the basal shearing surface of the sliding mass. The results indicate that the slide velocity may reach values around 16m/s when displacement reaches 250m.

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