Abstract

Abstract. The evaluation of potential landslides in mountain areas is a very complex process. Currently, event understanding is scarce due to information limitations. Identifying the whole chain of events is not a straightforward task, and the impacts of mass-wasting processes depend on the conditions downstream of the origin. In this paper, we present an example that illustrates the complexities in the evaluation of the chain of events that may lead to a natural disaster. On 16 December 2017, a landslide occurred in the Yelcho mountain range (southern Chile). In that event, 7 million m3 of rocks and soil fell on the Yelcho glacier, depositing 2 million m3 on the glacier terminal, and the rest continued downstream, triggering a mudflow that hit Villa Santa Lucía in Chilean Patagonia and killing 22 people. The complex event was anticipated in the region by the National Geological and Mining Survey (Sernageomin in Spanish). However, the effects of the terrain characteristics along the run-out area were more significant than anticipated. In this work, we evaluate the conditions that enabled the mudflow that hit Villa Santa Lucía. We used the information generated by Sernageomin's professionals after the mudflow. We carried out geotechnical tests to characterize the soil. We simulated the mudflow using two hydrodynamic programs (r.avaflow and Flo-2D) that can handle the rheology of the water–soil mixture. Our results indicate that the soil is classified as volcanic pumices. This type of soil can be susceptible to the collapse of the structure when subjected to shearing (molding), flowing as a viscous liquid. From the numerical modeling, we concluded that r.avaflow performs better than Flo-2D. The mudflow was satisfactorily simulated using a water content in the mixture ranging from 30 % to 40 %, which would have required a source of about 3 million m3 of water. Coupling the simulations and the soil tests that we performed, we estimated that in the area scoured by the mudflow, there were probably around 2 800 000 m3 of water within the soil. Therefore, the conditions of the valley were crucial to enhancing the impacts of the landslide. This result is relevant because it highlights the importance of evaluating the complete chain of events to map hazards. We suggest that in future hazard mapping, geotechnical studies in combination with hydrodynamic simulation should be included, in particular when human lives are at risk.

Highlights

  • Landslide processes are dangerous in areas close to human settlements

  • We evaluate the mechanisms that enable a landslide of 7 × 106 m3 to evolve to the catastrophic mudflow that destroyed Villa Santa Lucía in Chilean Patagonia, resulting in 22 people dead

  • Given the complexity and the potential increase in future extreme-event occurrences that can trigger landslides, we suggest that hazard studies should consider the structural conditions present in the area of influence of the mudflows

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Summary

Introduction

Landslide processes are dangerous in areas close to human settlements. They can affect nearby villages, directly destroying houses and taking human lives (Gariano and Guzzetti, 2016) or indirectly affecting the connectivity of remote areas (Winter et al, 2016). The impacts of landslides are a function of the size of the event and of the conditions downstream, for example glacial lakes susceptible to overflow as well as unstable valleys that, given the right soil matrix and water content, can mobilize and produce mudflows (Carey et al, 2011; Haeberli et al, 2013). Baseline information availability is still critical in austral zones of South America, especially in northern Patagonia, with a low population density that has not encouraged rigorous evaluation. Northern Patagonia shows an increase in the population (INE, 2018), increasing the risk. A better understanding of the mudflows’ chain of events triggered by landslides is urgent

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