Abstract

Landslides are one of the most devastating and recurring natural disasters and have affected several mountainous regions across the globe. The Indian Himalayan region is no exception to landslide incidences affecting key economic sectors such as transportation and agriculture and often leading to loss of lives. As reflected in the global landslide dataset, most of the landslides in this region are rainfall triggered. The region is prone to 15% of the global rainfall-induced landslides, and thereby a review of the studies in the region is inevitable. The high exposure to landslide risk has made the Indian Himalayas receive growing attention by the landslides community. A review of landslides studies conducted in this region is therefore important to provide a general picture of the state-of-the-art, a reference point for researchers and practitioners working in this region for the first time, and a summary of the improvements most urgently needed to better address landslide hazard research and management. This article focuses on various studies ranging from forecasting and monitoring to hazard and susceptibility analysis. The various factors used to analyze landslide are also studied for various landslide zones in the region. The analysis reveals that there are several avenues where significant research work is needed such as the inclusion of climate change factors or the acquisition of basic data of highest quality to be used as input data for computational models. In addition, the review reveals that, despite the entire region being highly landslide prone, most of the studies have focused on few regions and large areas have been neglected. The aim of the review is to provide a reference for stakeholders and researchers who are currently or looking to work in the Indian Himalayas, to highlight the shortcomings and the points of strength of the research being conducted, and to provide a contribution in addressing the future developments most urgently needed to obtain a consistent advance in landslide risk reduction of the area.

Highlights

  • Landslides are the most frequent naturally occurring hazards that affect people and their livelihood worldwide

  • The analysis reveals that the landslide studies in the region are quite biased towards

  • The analysis reveals that the landslide studies in the region are quite biased towards Uttarakhand region, while there are few to no studies in the northeast Indian region (Figure 5)

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Summary

Introduction

Landslides are the most frequent naturally occurring hazards that affect people and their livelihood worldwide. Sci. 2020, 10, 2466 understand, assess, and mitigate landslide scenarios in the Indian Himalayan region. The need for such a review was raised from the compilation of the global landslide disaster database by Froude and Petley, [1]. In their database, a total of 5318 non-seismic landslides occurred from 2004 to 2017, of which 3285 landslides were triggered by rainfall. In the context of the Indian Himalayas, during the same period, 580 landslides occurred with 477 triggered by rainfall, thereby contributing 14.52%

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