Abstract

Sinkholes are sudden disasters that are usually small in size and occur at unexpected locations. They may cause serious damage to life and property. Sinkhole-prone areas can be monitored using Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) time series. Defining a pattern using InSAR-derived spatio-temporal deformations, this study presents a sinkhole pattern detector, called the Sinkhole Scanner. The Sinkhole Scanner includes a spatio-temporal mathematical model such as a 2-dimensional time evolving Gaussian function as a kernel, which moves over the study area using a sliding window approach. The scanner attempts to fit the model over deformation time series of Constantly Coherent Scatterers (CCS) intersected by the window and returns the posterior variance as a measure of goodness of fit. In this way, the scanner searches for subsiding regions resembling sinkhole shapes over a sinkhole prone area. It is designed to detect large sinkholes with a high efficiency, and small sinkholes with a lower efficiency. It is tested at four different spatial scales, and on a simulated and real set of deformation data. Real data were obtained from Sentinel-1A SLC data in IW mode, over Ireland where a large sinkhole occurred on 24 September 2018. The Sinkhole Scanner was able to identify a pattern of low posterior variance zones consistent with the simulated set. In case of the real data, it is able to identify significantly low posterior variance zones near the sinkhole area with the lowest value being 51.1% of the maximum value. The results from Sinkhole Scanner over the real sinkhole site were compared with Multiple Hypothesis Testing (MHT), which identifies Breakpoint and Heaviside temporal anomalies in the deformation time series of CCS. MHT was able to identify high likelihood for Heaviside anomalies in deformation time series of CCS near the sinkhole site about 10 epochs before the sinkhole occurrence. We show that the Sinkhole Scanner is efficient in monitoring a large area and search for sinkholes and that MHT can be used successively to identify temporal anomalies in the vicinity of areas detected by the Sinkhole Scanner. Future research may address other Sinkhole shapes whereas the underlying stochastic model may be adjusted. We conclude that the Sinkhole Scanner is important to be applied at different levels of scale to converge on potential sinkhole centers.

Highlights

  • The coordinates in WGS84 coordinate reference system (CRS) were projected onto the local Universal Transverse Mercator (UTM)

  • We describe the results from the Sinkhole Scanner step

  • We observed that a few epochs before the sinkhole event, there was a sudden change in the behaviour of the deformation time series of Coherent Scatterers (CCS) lying over the mining region, close to the sinkhole site

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Summary

Introduction

A particular phenomenon that we study in this paper concerns cavities that are formed due to the dissolution of subsurface bedrock, see Figure 1a They result in unbalanced gravitational forces due to the Earth mass present above the cavity [1]. Dissolution dolines occur by water penetration through a large number of small fissures, followed by dissolving the rocks solutes. This is followed by a collapse caused by weathering of the overburden material [26]. Their shape is often Gaussian, see an example shown, and the subsidence on the surface is gradual and evident. Collapse dolines occur when the above ground suddenly collapses into the cavity created below

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