Major earthquakes in steep orogens can trigger extensive landsliding. Most of the landslide bodies come to rest high on the slopes, but subsequent rainfalls can easily remobilize them …
K Rana, U Ozturk, N Malik - Geophysical Research Letters, 2021 - Wiley Online Library
Electronic databases of landslides seldom include the triggering mechanisms, rendering these inventories unusable for landslide hazard modeling. We present a method for …
M Chen, C Tang, J Xiong, M Chang, N Li - Catena, 2024 - Elsevier
A high-magnitude earthquake can trigger substantial amounts of co-seismic debris and unstable hillslopes in mountainous regions, which leads to a significant increase in the …
Landslide failure mechanisms are influenced by topography, lithology, structure and rock mass damage–factors that also control landslide susceptibility. Failure mechanisms …
Coseismic landslides are observed in higher concentrations around surface-rupturing faults. This observation has been attributed to a combination of stronger ground motions and …
Widespread triggering of landslides by large storms or earthquakes is a dominant mechanism of erosion in mountain landscapes. If landslides occur repeatedly in particular …
Landslides triggered by earthquake shaking pose a significant hazard in active mountain regions. Steep topography promotes gravitational instabilities and can amplify the seismic …
Landslide susceptibility maps indicate the spatial distribution of landslide likelihood. Modeling susceptibility over large or diverse terrains remains a challenge due to the sparsity …
S Hu, X Wang, N Wang, D Yang, D Wang, S Ma… - Catena, 2022 - Elsevier
Recently, the concept of landslide path dependence has been proposed and well confirmed in landslide studies in central Italy and the Nepal Himalaya, providing a novel perspective …