4.7 Article

Paraglacial rock-slope deformations: sudden or delayed response? Insights from an integrated numerical modelling approach

Journal

LANDSLIDES
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 1311-1326

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s10346-020-01560-x

Keywords

Rock slope instability; Deglaciation; Paraglacial; Numerical modelling; Damage; Slope creep

Funding

  1. Universita degli Studi di Milano - Bicocca within the CRUI-CARE Agreement
  2. Fondazione Cariplo [2016-0757]
  3. MIUR - Dipartimenti di Eccellenza 2018-2022, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Milano-Bicocca
  4. Italian MIUR (Rita Levi Montalcini Grant) [DM 694-26/2017]

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Glacial and paraglacial processes have a significant impact on rock slope stability in alpine environments. Understanding the mechanisms and timing of paraglacial rock slope failures is crucial. Glacial morphology, rate of deglaciation, and slope strength all influence the response of rock slopes to deglaciation.
Glacial and paraglacial processes have a major influence on rock slope stability in alpine environments. Slope deglaciation causes debuttressing, stress and hydro-mechanical perturbations that promote progressive slope failure and the development of slow rock slope deformation possibly evolving until catastrophic failure. Paraglacial rock slope failures can develop soon after or thousands of years after deglaciation, and can creep slowly accelerating until catastrophic failure or nucleate sudden rockslides. The roles of topography, rock properties and deglaciation processes in promoting the different styles of paraglacial rock slope failure are still elusive. Nevertheless, their comprehensive understanding is crucial to manage future geohazards in modern paraglacial settings affected by ongoing climate change. We simulate the different modes and timing of paraglacial slope failures in an integrated numerical modelling approach that couples realistic deglaciation histories derived by modelling of ice dynamics to 2D time-dependent simulations of progressive failure processes. We performed a parametric study to assess the effects of initial ice thickness, deglaciation rate, rock-slope strength and valley shape on the mechanisms and timing of slope response to deglaciation. Our results allow constraining the range of conditions in which rapid failures or delayed slow deformations occur, which we compare to natural Alpine case studies. The melting of thicker glaciers is linked to shallower rockslides daylighting at higher elevation, with a shorter response time. More pronounced glacial morphologies influences slope lifecycle and favour the development of shallower, suspended rockslides. Weaker slopes and faster deglaciations produce to faster slope responses. In a risk-reduction perspective, we expect rockslide differentiation in valleys showing a strong glacial imprint, buried below thick ice sheets during glaciation.

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