The Latium region (Central Italy) is currently updating the institutional hydro-geological plan, one of the main planning tools to prevent geo-hydrological hazard at regional scale. The plan focuses on landslides, erosion and hydraulic hazard assessment using both conventional and innovative approaches. This analysis required different scales of study, according to the different processes acting on slopes, and their broader physiographic context. In this multiscale approach, slope units represent the most suitable territorial units of analysis and mapping, considering their morphohydrological representativeness and scalability. Slope units are a particular type of terrain units, characterized by internal homogeneity and external heterogeneity, delineated from a digital elevation model considering the natural setting of the territory. A widely used tool for slope unit delineation is the software ‘’r.slopeunits’’ [1,2]. The parameters controlling the delineation are both morphological and hydrological, derived from a digital elevation model. The software implements an iterative and adaptive process, depending on the aforementioned parameters, resulting in slope unit sets optimized for the local morphology. The accurate selection of input parameters requires careful consideration, but it also allows extra flexibility in defining the proper scale of the output slope unit map. Here, we aim at obtaining a new way to select the values of the software’s input parameters, considering their relations with the different processes, to single out the proper scale of analysis. Specifically, we provide additional terrain analysis methods to find “good” parameter ranges, implemented in simple computer scripts that make use of r.slopeunits. The workflow is organized as follow. First, the geomorphological domains (i.e. hillslope, unchanneled, and fluvial domain) are discriminated by the implementation of the slope – area function, with the area weighed by the runoff values available from the GIS-based model BIGBANG [3]. Next, the flow paths related to the hillslope and unchanneled domains and related basins are hierarchized using Strahler ordering. Then, delineation of basins and half-basins for every path order is computed. Finally, implementation of zonal statistics functions on the half-basins of every path order and calculation of the parameters ranges that for slope unit delineation is performed. Implementation of a multi – scale derivation of slope units with a range of input parameters, customized according to the type of natural phenomena (landslide, flooding, erosion etc.), allows an adaptive multi – scale approach, specific for each process, for a comprehensive multi-hazard evaluation. One of the future applications of the research is the application of this approach for the definition of ‘’buffer zones’’ covered by natural or semi-natural vegetation, capable of counteracting slope instabilities. In the context of the hazard and risk mitigation management, these outcomes could represent an efficient aid for regulating urban development in a proper and secure manner. References [1] Alvioli et al. (2016). Geosci Mod Dev, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-3975-2016 [2] Alvioli et al. (2020). Geomorphology, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2020.107124 [3] BIGBANG model, https://www.isprambiente.gov.it/pre_meteo/idro/BIGBANG_ISPRA.html

Tailoring slope units delineation according to different natural phenomena for institutional land use planning at the regional scale / Napolitano, Rossana; Delchiaro, Michele; Giannini, LEONARDO MARIA; Masciulli, Claudia; Mastrantoni, Giandomenico; Zocchi, Marta; Alvioli, Massimiliano; Mazzanti, Paolo; Esposito, Carlo. - (2024). (Intervento presentato al convegno EGU General Assembly 2024 tenutosi a Vienna, Austria) [10.5194/egusphere-egu24-18657].

Tailoring slope units delineation according to different natural phenomena for institutional land use planning at the regional scale

Rossana, Napolitano;Michele, Delchiaro;Leonardo Maria, Giannini;Claudia, Masciulli;Giandomenico, Mastrantoni;Marta, Zocchi;Paolo, Mazzanti;Carlo, Esposito
2024

Abstract

The Latium region (Central Italy) is currently updating the institutional hydro-geological plan, one of the main planning tools to prevent geo-hydrological hazard at regional scale. The plan focuses on landslides, erosion and hydraulic hazard assessment using both conventional and innovative approaches. This analysis required different scales of study, according to the different processes acting on slopes, and their broader physiographic context. In this multiscale approach, slope units represent the most suitable territorial units of analysis and mapping, considering their morphohydrological representativeness and scalability. Slope units are a particular type of terrain units, characterized by internal homogeneity and external heterogeneity, delineated from a digital elevation model considering the natural setting of the territory. A widely used tool for slope unit delineation is the software ‘’r.slopeunits’’ [1,2]. The parameters controlling the delineation are both morphological and hydrological, derived from a digital elevation model. The software implements an iterative and adaptive process, depending on the aforementioned parameters, resulting in slope unit sets optimized for the local morphology. The accurate selection of input parameters requires careful consideration, but it also allows extra flexibility in defining the proper scale of the output slope unit map. Here, we aim at obtaining a new way to select the values of the software’s input parameters, considering their relations with the different processes, to single out the proper scale of analysis. Specifically, we provide additional terrain analysis methods to find “good” parameter ranges, implemented in simple computer scripts that make use of r.slopeunits. The workflow is organized as follow. First, the geomorphological domains (i.e. hillslope, unchanneled, and fluvial domain) are discriminated by the implementation of the slope – area function, with the area weighed by the runoff values available from the GIS-based model BIGBANG [3]. Next, the flow paths related to the hillslope and unchanneled domains and related basins are hierarchized using Strahler ordering. Then, delineation of basins and half-basins for every path order is computed. Finally, implementation of zonal statistics functions on the half-basins of every path order and calculation of the parameters ranges that for slope unit delineation is performed. Implementation of a multi – scale derivation of slope units with a range of input parameters, customized according to the type of natural phenomena (landslide, flooding, erosion etc.), allows an adaptive multi – scale approach, specific for each process, for a comprehensive multi-hazard evaluation. One of the future applications of the research is the application of this approach for the definition of ‘’buffer zones’’ covered by natural or semi-natural vegetation, capable of counteracting slope instabilities. In the context of the hazard and risk mitigation management, these outcomes could represent an efficient aid for regulating urban development in a proper and secure manner. References [1] Alvioli et al. (2016). Geosci Mod Dev, https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-9-3975-2016 [2] Alvioli et al. (2020). Geomorphology, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2020.107124 [3] BIGBANG model, https://www.isprambiente.gov.it/pre_meteo/idro/BIGBANG_ISPRA.html
2024
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1725818
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