气候变率&孟加拉Rangamati滑坡灾害降雨阈值线的建立

Mahmuda Khatun, A.T.M.Shakhawat Hossain, Hossain Md. Sayem
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在评估当前和过去气候情景下极端降雨事件对滑坡的影响。降雨引发的山体滑坡是通过使用事件统计数据得出的降雨量估计来分析的。已经确定,最近的气候变化,主要是温度和降雨模式显著增加了孟加拉国Rangamati地区降雨引起的山体滑坡灾害。在过去的40年(1981-2021年)里,Rangamati的温度和降雨量逐渐增加。2017年6月13日,孟加拉国兰加马蒂山区发生了由强季风性降雨(300毫米/24小时)引发的一系列山体滑坡,造成超过112人死亡。2010-21年的十年最高降雨量为3816毫米。还建立了因果关系和事件数量之间的关系。分析表明,前期和单日主要降雨模式都可以影响滑动事件。研究结果表明,6 ~ 9月季风降水对灾难性滑坡灾害事件有显著影响。最后,基于前日和单日强降雨以及滑坡造成的死亡人数,构建了研究区域的两条降雨阈值线。6天内的总降雨量为100毫米(16.66毫米/天),这似乎定义了导致浅层滑坡/边坡破坏的最小降雨量,而6天内的210毫米(35毫米/天)似乎定义了可能导致Rangamati地区灾难性滑坡的最低降雨量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate Variability & Establishment of Rainfall Threshold Line for Landslide Hazards in Rangamati, Bangladesh
This study aims to evaluate the impact of extreme rainfall events on landslides under current and past climate scenarios. Rainfall-triggered landslides are analyzed by rainfall estimates, derived using statistics of events. It is established that recent climate changes, mainly temperature and rainfall patterns have significantly increased the rainfall-induced landslide hazards in the Rangamati district, Bangladesh. It is also observed that the temperature and rainfall of Rangamati had increased gradually during the last 40 years (1981-2021). On 13 June 2017, a series of landslides triggered by heavy monsoon rains (300 mm/24 h) occurred and killed more than 112 people in the Rangamati hill district, Bangladesh. The highest annual decade rainfall is 3816 mm, recorded in 2010-21. A relationship between causalities and the number of events has also been established. The analysis shows that both antecedent and single-day major rainfall patterns can influence sliding events. It is established that monsoonal rainfall (June-September) can significantly influence catastrophic landslide hazard events. Finally, two rainfall threshold lines for the researched area are constructed based on antecedent and single-day major rainfall occurrences, as well as the number of fatalities caused by landslides. Total rainfall of 100 mm (16.66 mm/day) during six days appears to define the minimum rainfall that has led to shallow landslides/slope failures, while 210 mm (35 mm/day) within six days appears to define the lowest rainfall that could be a cause of catastrophic landslide in Rangamati district.
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