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Landslides are significant geological hazards in mountainous regions, arising from both natural forces and human actions, presenting serious environmental challenges through their extensive damage to properties and infrastructure, often leading to casualties and alterations to the landscape. This study employed GIS-based techniques to evaluate and map the landslide susceptibility in the Bekhair structure located within the Zagros mountains of Kurdistan, northern Iraq. An inventory map containing 282 landslide occurrences was compiled through intensive field investigations, as well as the interpretation of remote sensing data and Google Earth images. Ten potential influencing factors, including elevation, rainfall, lithology, slope, curvature, aspect, LULC, NDVI, distance to roads and rivers, were selected to construct susceptibility maps by integrating the frequency ratio (FR) and analytical hierarchy process (AHP) approaches, with the goal of understanding how these factors relate to landslides occurrence. The Bekhair core area was divided into 5 hazard zones on the landslide susceptibility maps. The regions classified as very low and low hazard zones are mainly occur in flat or gently sloping plains that characterized by resistant rocks, dense vegetation, minimal rainfall, shallow valleys, and are distant from riverbanks and roads. The areas designated as high and very high hazard zones are found in steep slopes and rough terrain with bare soil, intense weathering, high rainfall, sparse vegetation, highly fractured rocks, deep valleys, and close proximity to construction projects. The moderate hazard zones are mainly located between the other 4 zones across the Bekhair anticline. Results of the susceptibility analysis indicate that the occurrence of landslides in Kurdistan mountains are primarily controlled by factors related to the tectonic structure, surface characteristics and environmental conditions, such as rock lithology (competency), terrain slope, rainfall intensity, and human impacts. The delineation of landslide hazard zones offers important guides for government decision-makers engaged in regional planning, infrastructure development, and the formulation of strategies to mitigate landslides and protect lives and properties in Kurdistan. The accuracy of susceptibility maps was evaluated using the R-index and the AUC-ROC curve. The landslide susceptibility index (LSI) values allocated to different susceptibility classes derived from both FR and AHP models are consistent with the values obtained from the R-index. Moreover, the FR model demonstrated superior performance compared to the AHP model, with a success rate of 85.3% and a predictive rate of 81.2%, in contrast to the AHP model's success rate of 75.2% and predictive rate of 72.4%.

期刊论文 2024-12-10 DOI: 10.1007/s11069-024-07069-z ISSN: 0921-030X

Landslides are widespread geomorphological phenomena with complex mechanisms that have caused extensive causalities and property damage worldwide. The scale and frequency of landslides are presently increasing owing to the warming effects of climate change, which further increases the associated safety risks. In this study, the relationship between historical landslides and environmental variables in the Hanjiang River Basin was determined and an optimized model was used to constrain the relative contribution of variables and best spatial response curve. The optimal MaxEnt model was used to predict the current distribution of landslides and influence of future rainfall changes on the landslide susceptibility. The results indicate that environmental variables in the study area statistically correlate with landslide events over the past 20 years. The MaxEnt model evaluation was applied to landslide hazards in the Hanjiang River Basin based on current climate change scenarios. The results indicate that 25.9% of the study area is classified as a high-risk area. The main environmental variables that affect the distribution of landslides include altitude, slope, normalized difference vegetation index, annual precipitation, distance from rivers, and distance from roads, with a cumulative contribution rate of approximately 90%. The annual rainfall in the Hanjiang River Basin will continue to increase under future climate warming scenarios. Increased rainfall will further increase the extent of high- and medium-risk areas in the basin, especially when following the RCP8.5 climate prediction, which is expected to increase the high-risk area by 10.7% by 2070. Furthermore, high landslide risk areas in the basin will migrate to high-altitude areas in the future, which poses new challenges for the prevention and control of landslide risks. This study demonstrates the usefulness of the MaxEnt model as a tool for landslide susceptibility prediction in the Hanjiang River Basin caused by global warming and yields robust prediction results. This approach therefore provides an important reference for river basin management and disaster reduction and prevention. The study on landslide risks also supports the hypothesis that global climate change will further enhance the frequency and intensity of landslide activity throughout the course of the 21st Century.

期刊论文 2024-08-01 DOI: 10.1007/s12583-021-1511-2 ISSN: 1674-487X
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