Remote Sensing (May 2023)

Land Subsidence in a Coastal City Based on SBAS-InSAR Monitoring: A Case Study of Zhuhai, China

  • Huimin Sun,
  • Hongxia Peng,
  • Min Zeng,
  • Simiao Wang,
  • Yujie Pan,
  • Pengcheng Pi,
  • Zixuan Xue,
  • Xinwen Zhao,
  • Ao Zhang,
  • Fengmei Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15092424
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 9
p. 2424

Abstract

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The superimposed effects of sea level rise caused by global warming and land subsidence seriously threaten the sustainable development of coastal cities. In recent years, an important coastal city in China, Zhuhai, has been suffering from severe and widespread land subsidence; however, the characteristics, triggers, and vulnerability assessment of ground subsidence in Zhuhai are still unclear. Therefore, we used the SBAS-InSAR technique to process 51 Sentinel-1A images to monitor the land subsidence in Zhuhai during the period from August 2016 to June 2019. The results showed that there was extensive land subsidence in the study area, with a maximum rate of −109.75 mm/yr. The surface had sequentially undergone a process of minor uplift and decline fluctuation, sharp settlement, and stable subsidence. The distribution and evolution of land subsidence were controlled by tectonic fractures and triggered by the thickness of soft soil, the intensity of groundwater development, and the seasonal changes of atmospheric precipitation. The comprehensive index method and the analytic hierarchy process were applied to derive extremely high subsidence vulnerability in several village communities and some traffic arteries in Zhuhai. Our research provides a theoretical basis for urban disaster prevention in Zhuhai and the construction planning of coastal cities around the world.

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