Abstract

This work aims to prepare a reliable landslide susceptibility model and to analyse the factors contributing to landslides in a dynamic environment by considering the city of Gdynia, Poland as a case study. Geological, geomorphological, hydrological, hydrogeological, and anthropogenic predisposing factors are considered using geographic information systems. Ground types at different depths (1 m and 4 m b.g.l.) are used in the statistical susceptibility assessment for the first time. Landslide susceptibility maps are developed using two techniques in presenting landslides, 13 conditioning factors, and three statistical methods: landslide index, weight of evidence, and logistic regression. The considered factors have an influence on mass movement formation, but their roles are different. Many of these passive factors are interrelated and some of them are also related to active factors, i.e. triggers. Consideration of many thematic layers in the statistical approach allows for the selection of the most appropriate geo-environmental variables. The most significant conditioning factors that affect the likelihood of landsliding include land use and land cover as well as topography. The susceptibility maps generated by the index model and many interrelated passive factors appear to be over-predicted. The logistic regression model and only independent controlling factors (slope angle, slope aspect, and lithology) are sufficient to compile a reliable susceptibility map of Gdynia. Prediction rate curve plots show that the susceptibility map produced using logistic regression exhibits the highest prediction accuracy. The results emphasize the need to check independence in the selection of instability factors and the use of an independent subset of landslides for validation.

Highlights

  • Landslides are natural morphodynamic processes, which can trigger large-scale disasters if they occur in residential areas or industrial estates

  • This study investigates landslide susceptibility assessment for urban areas using geographic information system (GIS)-based statistical models, considering the seaside city of Gdynia, Poland, as a case study

  • Verification of landslide susceptibility maps using the success curves demonstrated the lower suitability of entire landslide areas for susceptibility analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Landslides are natural morphodynamic processes, which can trigger large-scale disasters if they occur in residential areas or industrial estates. Urban area landslide susceptibility assessment has been performed in a few urban areas such as Sasebo, Japan (Xie et al 2003), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (Althuwaynee et al 2012), and Seoul, South Korea (Lee et al 2017). This aforementioned issue is very significant, because in areas managed by man even small landslides disrupt the flow of goods and are expensive to clear (Clague and Stead 2012)

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