Abstract

Abstract. In karst environments, heavy rainfall is known to cause multiple geohydrological hazards, including inundations, flash floods, landslides and sinkholes. We studied a period of intense rainfall from 1 to 6 September 2014 in the Gargano Promontory, a karst area in Puglia, southern Italy. In the period, a sequence of torrential rainfall events caused severe damage and claimed two fatalities. The amount and accuracy of the geographical and temporal information varied for the different hazards. The temporal information was most accurate for the inundation caused by a major river, less accurate for flash floods caused by minor torrents and even less accurate for landslides. For sinkholes, only generic information on the period of occurrence of the failures was available. Our analysis revealed that in the promontory, rainfall-driven hazards occurred in response to extreme meteorological conditions and that the karst landscape responded to the torrential rainfall with a threshold behaviour. We exploited the rainfall and the landslide information to design the new ensemble–non-exceedance probability (E-NEP) algorithm for the quantitative evaluation of the possible occurrence of rainfall-induced landslides and of related geohydrological hazards. The ensemble of the metrics produced by the E-NEP algorithm provided better diagnostics than the single metrics often used for landslide forecasting, including rainfall duration, cumulated rainfall and rainfall intensity. We expect that the E-NEP algorithm will be useful for landslide early warning in karst areas and in other similar environments. We acknowledge that further tests are needed to evaluate the algorithm in different meteorological, geological and physiographical settings.

Highlights

  • Torrential rainfall is known to cause inundations, flash floods and different types of landslides, including debris flows, soil slides and rockfalls

  • We studied a period of intense rainfall from 1 to 6 September 2014 in the Gargano Promontory, a karst area in Puglia, southern Italy

  • We describe a series of rainfall events and their ground effects in the period from 1 to 6 September 2014 in the Gargano Promontory, a karst environment and a popular tourist area in the Puglia (Apulia) region, southern Italy

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Summary

Introduction

Torrential rainfall is known to cause inundations, flash floods and different types of landslides, including debris flows, soil slides and rockfalls. Martinotti et al.: Landslides, floods and sinkholes in a karst environment four heavy rainfall events, separated by periods with little or no rainfall, caused multiple geohydrological hazards in the promontory, including landslides, flash floods, widespread inundation and sinkholes. we present the main meteorological and rainfall characteristic of the heavy rainfall period that has resulted in landslides, flash floods, inundations and sinkholes in the Gargano Promontory, and we investigate the spatial-temporal relationships between the intense rainfall and its ground effects. we present a new method to forecast the possible occurrence of rainfall-induced landslides – and possibly the other associated geohydrological hazards – based on the continuous monitoring of local rainfall conditions.

Study area
Meteorological settings
Rainfall events
Spatial and temporal distributions of rainfall and geohydrological hazards
Geohydrological hazards forecasting algorithm
The E-NEP algorithm
Application and discussion of the E-NEP algorithm
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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