Abstract

Peshawar is one of the most densely populated cities of Pakistan with high urbanization rate. The city overexploits groundwater resources for household and commercial usage which has caused land subsidence. Land subsidence has long been an issue in Peshawar due to insufficient groundwater removal. In this research, we employ the persistent scatterer interferometry synthetic aperture radar (PS-InSAR) technique with Sentinel-1 imaging data to observe the yearly land subsidence and generate accumulative time-series maps for the years (2018 to 2020) using the SAR PROcessing tool (SARPROZ). The PS-InSAR findings from two contiguous paths are combined by considering the variance over the overlapping area. The subsidence rates in the Peshawar are from -59 to 17 mm/yr. The results show that subsidence is -28.48 mm/yr in 2018, the subsidence reached -49.02 mm/yr in 2019, while in 2020, the subsidence reached -49.90 mm/yr. The findings indicate a notable rise in land subsidence between the years 2018 and 2020. Subsidence is predicted in the research region primarily due to excessive groundwater removal and soil consolidation induced by surficial loads. The correlation of land subsidence observations with groundwater levels and precipitation data revealed some relationships. Overall, the proposed method efficiently monitors, maps, and detects subsidence-prone areas. The utilization of land subsidence maps will enhance the efficiency of urban planning, construction of surface infrastructure, and the management of risks associated with subsidence.

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