Abstract

Dominica is a geologically young, volcanic island in the eastern Caribbean. Due to its rugged terrain, substantial rainfall, and distinct soil characteristics, it is highly vulnerable to landslides. The dominant triggers of these landslides are hurricanes, tropical storms, and heavy prolonged rainfall events. These events frequently lead to loss of life and the need for a growing portion of the island’s annual budget to cover the considerable cost of reconstruction and recovery. For disaster risk mitigation and landslide risk assessment, landslide inventory and susceptibility maps are essential. Landslide inventory maps record existing landslides and include details on their type, location, spatial extent, and time of occurrence. These data are integrated (when possible) with the landslide trigger and pre-failure slope conditions to generate or validate a susceptibility map. The susceptibility map is used to identify the level of potential landslide risk (low, moderate, or high). In Dominica, these maps are produced using optical satellite and aerial images, digital elevation models, and historic landslide inventory data. This study illustrates the benefits of using satellite Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) to refine these maps. Our study shows that when using continuous high-resolution InSAR data, active slopes can be identified and monitored. This information can be used to highlight areas most at risk (for use in validating and updating the susceptibility map), and can constrain the time of occurrence of when the landslide was initiated (for use in landslide inventory mapping). Our study shows that InSAR can be used to assist in the investigation of pre-failure slope conditions. For instance, our initial findings suggest there is more land motion prior to failure on clay soils with gentler slopes than on those with steeper slopes. A greater understanding of pre-failure slope conditions will support the generation of a more dependable susceptibility map. Our study also discusses the integration of InSAR deformation-rate maps and time-series analysis with rainfall data in support of the development of rainfall thresholds for different terrains. The information provided by InSAR can enhance inventory and susceptibility mapping, which will better assist with the island’s current disaster mitigation and resiliency efforts.

Highlights

  • The Lesser Antilles is an arc of dormant and active volcanic islands in the CaribbeanSea [1]

  • Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR)-Small Baseline Subset (SBAS) processing is dependent on coherence

  • In Dominica, these maps are currently generated from optical imagery, digital elevation models, and historical landslide data

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Lesser Antilles is an arc of dormant and active volcanic islands in the CaribbeanSea [1]. The Lesser Antilles is an arc of dormant and active volcanic islands in the Caribbean. In the centre of the arc is the island of Dominica. Similar to other developing island states, Dominica is highly vulnerable to natural hazards from hurricanes, intense and prolonged rainfalls, volcanic and seismic activity, earthquakes, and tsunamis [2,3]. In 2018, the island was ranked 12th out of 111 for disaster vulnerability in the Commonwealth’s. Composite Vulnerability Index [4], and in 2020, it ranked 10th out of 180 in the Climate. The dominant triggers are hurricanes, tropical storms, and heavy rainfall events [6]. These types of storms are not uncommon

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call