Remote Sensing (Nov 2023)
Mapping and Pre- and Post-Failure Analyses of the April 2019 Kantutani Landslide in La Paz, Bolivia, Using Synthetic Aperture Radar Data
Abstract
Urban landslides have brought challenges to developing countries undergoing urbanization. Rapid approaches to assess ground deformation are required when facing the challenge of insufficient geological survey methods. Additionally, it is indeed a challenge to map landslide-affected areas, especially precipitation-induced landslides, through optical remote sensing methods. This study applied SAR change detection methods to map the slope failure event of the San Jorge Kantutani landfill site in La Paz, Bolivia, which occurred in April 2019, and Multi-Temporal Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry (MTInSAR) methods to assess pre- and post-failure ground stability related to this event. We found that the amplitude information of high-resolution COSMO-SkyMed SAR imagery and its texture information can be very useful in landslide mapping, especially in situations in which optical images are not available because of complex meteorological conditions and the similar spectral characteristics between the original land cover and landslide deposits. The MTInSAR analyses found that there was already significant deformation of more than 50 mm/year along the slope direction over this site before the landslide, and such deformation could be clearly discriminated from the surrounding environment. After the landslide event and the remobilization of the landslide deposit, the slope still shows a deformation velocity of more than 30 mm/year. The SAR amplitude change detection and MTInSAR fully exploited the SAR data in landslide studies and were useful in back analyzing the occurred landslides; this could be a good method for monitoring the ground stability of La Paz or even on a national scale over the long term for reducing the catastrophic effects of geological hazards in this landslide-prone city.
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