déposer
version française rss feed
HAL : hal-00706907, version 1

Fiche détaillée  Récupérer au format
Journal of Geophysical Research VOL. 117 (2012) 12 PP.
Ambient seismic noise monitoring of a clay landslide: Toward failure prediction.
Guénolé Mainsant 1, Eric Larose 1, Cornelia Brönnimann 2, Denis Jongmans 1, Clément Michoud 3, Michel Jaboyedoff 3
(22/03/2012)

Given that clay-rich landslides may become mobilized, leading to rapid mass movements (earthflows and debris flows), they pose critical problems in risk management worldwide. The most widely proposed mechanism leading to such flow-like movements is the increase in water pore pressure in the sliding mass, generating partial or complete liquefaction. This solid-to-liquid transition results in a dramatic reduction of mechanical rigidity in the liquefied zones, which could be detected by monitoring shear wave velocity variations. With this purpose in mind, the ambient seismic noise correlation technique has been applied to measure the variation in the seismic surface wave velocity in the Pont Bourquin landslide (Swiss Alps). This small but active composite earthslide-earthflow was equipped with continuously recording seismic sensors during spring and summer 2010. An earthslide of a few thousand cubic meters was triggered in mid-August 2010, after a rainy period. This article shows that the seismic velocity of the sliding material, measured from daily noise correlograms, decreased continuously and rapidly for several days prior to the catastrophic event. From a spectral analysis of the velocity decrease, it was possible to determine the location of the change at the base of the sliding layer. These results demonstrate that ambient seismic noise can be used to detect rigidity variations before failure and could potentially be used to predict landslides.
1 :  Institut des sciences de la Terre (ISTerre)
CNRS : UMR5275 – IFSTTAR – Université de Savoie – Université Joseph Fourier - Grenoble I – INSU – OSUG – Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] : UR219
2 :  GEOLEP
EPFL
3 :  Institute of Geomatics and Risk Analysis (IGARS)
University of Lausanne
Ondes et structures
Risques
Planète et Univers/Sciences de la Terre
Liste des fichiers attachés à ce document : 
PDF
JGR_mainsant2012.pdf(1.4 MB)

tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...
tous les articles de la base du CCSd...