In the past three decades, the city of Addis Ababa, a capital city of Africa, has grown significantly in population, facilities, and infrastructure. The area involved in the recent urbanization is prone to slow natural subsidence phenomena that can be accelerated due to anthropogenic factors such as groundwater overexploitation and loading of unconsolidated soils. The main aim of this study is to identify and monitor the areas most affected by subsidence in a context, such as that of many areas of emerging countries, characterized by the lack of geological and technical data. In these contexts, advanced remote sensing techniques can support the assessment of spatial and temporal patterns of ground instability phenomena, providing critical information on potential conditioning and triggering factors. In the case of subsidence, these factors may have a natural or anthropogenic origin or result from a combination of both. The increasing availability of SAR data acquired by the Sentinel-1 mission around the world and the refinement of processing techniques that have taken place in recent years allow one to identify and monitor the critical conditions deriving from the impressive recent expansion of megacities such as Addis Ababa. In this work, the Sentinel-1 SAR images from Oct 2014 to Jan 2021 were processed through the PS-InSAR technique, which allows us to estimate the deformations of the Earth's surface with high precision, especially in urbanized areas. The obtained deformation velocity maps and displacement time series have been validated using accurate second-order geodetic control points and compared with the recent urbanization of the territory. The results demonstrate the presence of areas affected by a vertical rate of displacement of up to 21 mm/year and a maximum displacement of about 13.50 cm. These areas correspond to sectors that are most predisposed to subsidence phenomena due to the presence of recent alluvial deposits and have suffered greater anthropic pressure through the construction of new buildings and the exploitation of groundwater. Satellite interferometry techniques are confirmed to be a reliable tool for monitoring potentially dangerous geological processes, and in the case examined in this work, they represent the only way to verify the urbanized areas exposed to the risk of damage with great effectiveness and low cost, providing local authorities with crucial information on the priorities of intervention.
On 26th May 2021, an earthquake with a moment magnitude M(w )5.1 hit the densely populated cities of Gisenyi (Rwanda) and Goma (D.R. Congo) which sit on the active East African Rift System. It was one of the largest earthquakes associated with the 2021 Mount Nyiragongo eruption. Although of moderate magnitude, the earthquake substantially damaged manmade structures. This paper presents field observations on the geotechnical impact, building damage, and factors contributing to the heightened destruction caused by this moderate earthquake. The damage pattern observed in the field indicates that masonry structures with inadequate seismic detailing were the most damaged buildings. In addition, the statistical analysis of the damaged buildings indicates most of the damaged structures were located in plains covered by volcanic soil. The intensity of the waves was estimated using the building damage data based on the European Macroseismic Scale (EMS-98). An intensity distribution map was generated for the surveyed area, suggesting EMS-98 intensity of VIII or IX along the eastern basin boundary fault and VII around the cities of Goma and Gisenyi where the land is composed of black cotton soil of volcanic origin. The higher intensity values along the eastern basin-bounding fault indicate that a reevaluation of the seismic hazard for the region is necessary. Since this is the first-ever such damage survey for the region, the developed intensity map can be used to understand the correlation between the intensity of the ground motion and damage severity which contributed to the seismic hazard assessment of the study area.
East Africa (EA) suffers from the inadequate characterization of atmospheric aerosols, with far-reaching consequences of its inability to quantify precisely the impacts of these particles on regional climate. The current study aimed at character-izing absorption and radiative properties of aerosols using the long-term (2001-2018) AErosol RObotic NETwork (AERONET) and Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA-2) data over three environ-mentally specific sites in EA. The annual mean absorption aerosol optical depth (AAOD440 nm), absorption Angstrom Ex-ponent (AAE440-870 nm), total effective radius (REff), and total volume concentration (mu m3/mu m2) revealed significant spatial heterogeneity over the domain. The study domain exhibited a significant contribution of fine-mode aerosols com-pared to the coarse-mode particles. The monthly variation in SSA440 nm over EA explains the strength in absorption aero-sols that range from moderate to strong absorbing aerosols. The aerosols exhibited significant variability over the study domain, with the dominance of absorbing fine-mode aerosols over Mbita accounting for similar to 40 to similar to 50 %, while weakly absorbing coarse-mode particles accounted for similar to 8.2 % over Malindi. The study conclusively determined that Mbita was dominated by AAOD mainly from biomass burning in most of the months, whereas Malindi was coated with black carbon. The direct aerosol radiative forcing (DARF) retrieved from both the AERONET and MERRA-2 models showed strong cooling at the top of the atmosphere (TOA; -6 to -27 Wm-2) and the bottom of the atmosphere (BOA, -7 to -66 Wm-2). However, significant warming was noticed within the atmosphere (ATM; +14 to +76 Wm-2), an indica-tion of the role of aerosols in regional climate change. The study contributed to understanding aerosol absorption and ra-diative characteristics over EA and can form the basis of other related studies over the domain and beyond.