Ischia landslides (Italy): a multidisciplinary approach aimed to the knowledge of soil properties
Conference Paper
Publication Date:
2010
abstract:
In Italy rapid landslides are the most frequently occurring natural disasters and, after earthquakes, cause the
highest number of victims. In this contribution we attempt to prove that there exists a tight connection
between the presence of a specific soil type, namely andic soils, and the occurrence of the main catastrophic
mudflows and debris flows occurred in Italy in the last decades. The study was performed by means of an
integrated pedological and hydrological analysis on the detachment crowns of some of the most important
catastrophic mudflows and debris flows that occurred in Italy in the last decades and involving/evolving
surface soils. The results at both regional (Campania) and National (Italy) scale clearly show that despite the
large variability of the environmental settings of the studied sites there are indeed some striking
homogeneous soil features in the detachment crowns including (i) soil morphology, (ii) andic features
ranging from high to moderate, (iii) high water retention throughout a large range of pressure heads. Results
seem to reveal clear cause-effect evidences between andic soils and the investigated catastrophic
mudflows/debrisflows; this must be related to the unique physical properties of these soils inducing high
landslide vulnerability.
Iris type:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
Landslide; hydropedology; andic soils
List of contributors:
Orefice, Nadia; Mele, Giacomo; DE MASCELLIS, Roberto
Book title:
19th World Congress of Soil Science - Soil solutions for a changing world