Abstract

Rain-induced shallow landslide is the major type of landslide that happens on natural terrain in Hong Kong due to its high seasonal rainfall and deep weathering soil profile. The Geotechnical Engineering Office has been in a leading role to steer the risk management of natural terrain landslides in Hong Kong. Recently, the territory-wide rainfall-based landslide susceptibility model (in terms of landslide density per year) has been developed to predict the number of natural terrain landslides that may occur in an anticipated rainfall event. Subsequently, the storm-based landslide density has been transformed to the annual landslide frequency to compile the territory-wide landslide frequency map by incorporating the mean annual frequency of occurrence of different probable rainfall scenarios. The annual rainfall frequency of a particular rainfall scenario is derived from its return period, determined based on the abundant real-time rainfall data at a five-minute interval from 110 automatic raingauges across Hong Kong at an average density of 10 km2/gauge. The transformation is discussed in this paper, together with the evaluation of the performance of the landslide frequency map. In addition, the potential applications of the map in Hong Kong and the pitfalls of the common evaluation methods, including the receiver operating characteristic curve and the success-rate curve, are highlighted.

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