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Representative rainfall thresholds for landslides in the Nepal Himalaya

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 100, Issue 3-4, Pages 429-443

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.01.014

Keywords

Himalaya; rainfall thresholds; landslides; antecedent rainfall

Funding

  1. Sasagawa Fund for Scientific Research, The Japan Science Society

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Measuring some 2400 kill in length, the Himalaya accommodate millions of people in northern India and Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, and parts of other Asian nations. Every year, especially during monsoon rains, landslides and related natural events in these mountains cause tremendous damage to lives, property, infrastructure, and environment. In the context of the Himalaya, however, the rainfall thresholds for landslide initiation are not well understood. This paper describes regional aspects of rainfall thresholds for landslides in the Himalaya. Some 677 landslides occurring from 1951 to 2006 Were StUdied to analyze raini'all thresholds. Out of the 677 landslides, however, only 193 associated with rainfall data were analyzed to yield a threshold relationship between rainfall intensity, rainfall duration, and landslide initiation. The threshold relationship fitted to the lower boundary of the field defined by landslide-triggering rainfall events is I=73.90D(-0.79) (I=rainfall intensity in mm h(-1) and D=duration ill hours), revealing that when the daily precipitation exceeds 144 mm, the risk of landslides on Himalayan mountain slopes is high. Normalized rainfall intensity-duration relationships and landslide initiation thresholds were established from the data after normalizing rainfall-intensity data with respect to mean annual precipitation (MAP) as an index in which N-1=1.10D(-0.59) (N-1=normalized intensity in h(-1)). Finally, the role of antecedent rainfall in causing landslides was also investigated by considering daily rainfall during failure and the cumulative rainfall to discover at what point antecedent rainfall plays all important role ill Himalayan landslide processes. Rainfall thresholds presented in this paper are generalized so they call be used in landslide warning systems in the Nepal Himalaya. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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