Abstract

Abstract. Ground movement is a critical concern for urban safety, and understanding its causes and consequences is essential. Mining of hard coal in the Ruhr area of Germany has caused long-term subsidence, leading to building damage and sinkholes in affected cities. The multi-temporal interferometric synthetic aperture radar (MTInSAR) technique has been widely adopted for estimating ground movement at millimetre-level accuracy using spaceborne SAR data. Although many European government institutes have implemented this technique for monitoring purposes, the European Ground Motion Service (EGMS) provides up-to-date ground movement products (until the end of 2020) across 31 countries. However, these products may not always meet the requirements for local use due to being untimely or missing important features. This paper demonstrates how we estimated ground movement in Ahlen, around the Ruhr area of Germany, using EGMS data as a priori and reference source. We implemented MTInSAR using Sentinel-1 data from 2018 to 2021 and compared our results with those of EGMS. Our results reveal the movement one year ahead, contain more measurement points, and cover natural areas such as cropland and bare soil. We interpreted several movement scenarios in detail, and our work highlights the benefits of EGMS as an open-source overview for local monitoring applications. We also explored the influence of soil conditions on ground movement. Our findings suggest that the overall uplift trend observed during the post-mining phase has been mitigated or even reversed, likely due to soil shrinkage resulting from drought conditions, particularly in areas with high organic soil content.

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