4.6 Letter

Imaging ground surface deformations in post-disaster settings via small UAVs

Journal

GEOSCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 8, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40562-021-00194-8

Keywords

Natural hazards; Post-disaster; Small UAV

Funding

  1. National Institute of Geological Sciences of the University of the Philippines, Diliman
  2. University of the Philippines System through the UP Resilience Institute project Pandemics, Compound Disasters, and Other Complex Emergencies

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Small unmanned aerial vehicles have become increasingly utilized in field surveys for scientific research and disaster response. Through optimizing flight plans and data collection, important features of post-disaster environments can be effectively captured and preserved.
Small unmanned aerial vehicles have been seeing increased deployment in field surveys in recent years. Their portability, maneuverability, and high-resolution imaging are useful in mapping surface features that satellite- and plane-mounted imaging systems could not access. In this study, we develop and apply a workplan for implementing UAV surveys in post-disaster settings to optimize the flights for the needs of the scientific team and first responders. Three disasters caused by geophysical hazards and their associated surface deformation impacts were studied implementing this workplan and was optimized based on the target features and environmental conditions. An earthquake that caused lateral spreading and damaged houses and roads near riverine areas were observed in drone images to have lengths of up to 40 m and vertical displacements of 60 cm. Drone surveys captured 2D aerial raster images and 3D point clouds leading to the preservation of these features in soft-sedimentary ground which were found to be tilled over after only 3 months. The point cloud provided a stored 3D environment where further analysis of the mechanisms leading to these fissures is possible. In another earthquake-devastated locale, areas hypothesized to contain the suspected source fault zone necessitated low-altitude UAV imaging below the treeline capturing Riedel shears with centimetric accuracy that supported the existence of extensional surface deformation due to fault movement. In the aftermath of a phreatomagmatic eruption and the formation of sub-metric fissures in nearby towns, high-altitude flights allowed for the identification of the location and dominant NE-SW trend of these fissures suggesting horst-and-graben structures. The workplan implemented and refined during these deployments will prove useful in surveying other post-disaster settings around the world, optimizing data collection while minimizing risk to the drone and the drone operators.

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