It is well-known that the degree of saturation is a soil state condition able to represent the hydrological response of a shallow soil to weather conditions. One of the oldest models that referred on the degree of saturation to carry out the slope stability analysis at different scales, was the Shallow Landslide Instability (SLIP) Model. This paper shows how the SLIP model can be used to derive a simplified method to estimate multiple seasonal cycles of the mean degree of saturation of soil and to carry out the timevarying stability analysis of a test site slope. The simplified method to assess the degree of saturation uses easily available climatic data, such as air temperature and rainfall depth, and is validated through the comparison with long-term field measurements on a slope in Canneto Pavese, northern Italy. The SLIP model is also applied to obtain the safety factor of the slope, that was subjected to a rainfallinduced shallow landslide during the field monitoring period. Comparisons between field measurements and model outputs are used to validate the capability of the model of predicting both the mean degree of saturation of the topsoil and the observed unstable condition.

Soil Saturation and Stability Analysis of a Test Site Slope Using the Shallow Landslide Instability Prediction (SLIP) Model

MONTRASIO, LORELLA;VALENTINO, ROBERTO;Meisina, Claudia
Supervision
2018-01-01

Abstract

It is well-known that the degree of saturation is a soil state condition able to represent the hydrological response of a shallow soil to weather conditions. One of the oldest models that referred on the degree of saturation to carry out the slope stability analysis at different scales, was the Shallow Landslide Instability (SLIP) Model. This paper shows how the SLIP model can be used to derive a simplified method to estimate multiple seasonal cycles of the mean degree of saturation of soil and to carry out the timevarying stability analysis of a test site slope. The simplified method to assess the degree of saturation uses easily available climatic data, such as air temperature and rainfall depth, and is validated through the comparison with long-term field measurements on a slope in Canneto Pavese, northern Italy. The SLIP model is also applied to obtain the safety factor of the slope, that was subjected to a rainfallinduced shallow landslide during the field monitoring period. Comparisons between field measurements and model outputs are used to validate the capability of the model of predicting both the mean degree of saturation of the topsoil and the observed unstable condition.
2018
The Earth Sciences category includes resources that deal with all aspects of geosciences, including geology, geochemistry, geophysics, mineralogy, meteorology and atmospheric sciences, hydrology, oceanography, petroleum geology, volcanology, seismology, climatology, paleontology, geography, remote sensing, and geodesy.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
36
4
2331
2342
12
Degree of saturation; Field monitoring; Soil slip; Stability of slopes; Architecture2300 Environmental Science (all); Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology; Soil Science; Geology
www.wkap.nl/journalhome.htm/0960-3182
no
3
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Montrasio, Lorella; Valentino, Roberto; Meisina, Claudia
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1212817
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