Investigation of subsidence in the Manfredonia Gulf (Southern Italy) through multitemporal DInSAR techniques
Poster
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Abstract:
We present results of an experiment aimed at detecting possible displacements due to subsidence in the coastal
area of the Tavoliere plain, Puglia Region, in Southern Italy, through analysis of remotely sensed data.
The Tavoliere is the second largest Italian plain. Its coastal area, between the urban centers of Manfredonia and
Barletta, is composed of a 50 km long sandy beach (Manfredonia gulf), linking the Gargano massif at north with
the Murge plateau in the south-east. Both areas belong to the carbonate Mesozoic Apulian platform.
The current configuration of the Gulf was reached recently, as a consequence of the Holocene sea level rise. During
the Neolithic age the plain was occupied by an elongated lagoon (Salpi Lagoon) [1]. During the 2nd century B.C.,
alluvial deposition caused the lagoon to be separated into two basins: the so-called Salpi lake at south and the
Salso lake at north. To cope with the increasing demand of arable lands and with the necessity to make unhealthy
areas accessible to humans, some reclaims were accomplished by diverting and channelling the rivers crossing the
Tavoliere plain, and by levelling dune belts. At present, the beach is separated by low artificial dunes from the areas
already reclaimed and intensely cultivated or exploited as evaporation basin for salt production.
In the last decades, the coastal area has been retreating due to a reduction in sediment input necessary for coastal
equilibrium. The levelling of dunes and the decrease of fluvial turbid discharge due to dam constructions are
probably the cause of this deficit in sediment supply.
During highly intense hydrodynamic and meteorological events, sea waters often penetrate deeply inland, flooding
intensively cultivated areas. These events are occurring with growing frequency and rates. They are an indication
of the possibility that those areas are subject to subsidence at a faster rate in comparison to the surroundings.
An example is the salt marsh located inland of the tourist sea village "Ippocampo". Here, unpublished studies based
on ground data indicate average subsidence rates of the order of 0.20 mm/y in the last 125 ka for the inland area
next to the village.
More recently, height maps issued by the Italian Military Geographic Institute (IGM) in the 1950s report heights
a.s.l. of the order of a few m. Observing that today the area is practically at sea level, an average subsidence of the
order of tens of mm/y can be inferred for the last 50 years.
To gain insight into the recent evolution of these phenomena, we investigate vertical movements on the coastal
Tavoliere area through multitemporal differential Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (DInSAR) techniques.
We use a persistent scatterers interferometry (PSI) processing methodology [2] to estimate subsidence displacement
rates from long temporal series of SAR acquisitions. PSI techniques, first developed at POLIMI [3], allow
to retrieve phase information from stacks of co-registered SAR interferograms spanning many years and taken
from different directions with large baselines, by restricting the analysis to selected image pixels containing single
objects with strong radar backscatter returns. Exploiting the high temporal stability of radar returns from these targets,
it is possible to correct the images from spurious phase contributions such as atmospheric phase artefacts and
errors in the digital elevation models used to account for topographic InSAR phase. Such stable objects typically
coincide with man-made features, so successful applications of PSI techniques are mainly reported over urban
centers.
We processed a total of 105 SAR images acquired from the ERS-1/2 and ENVISAT satellites, organized in 3 stacks
related to both descending (50 ERS-1/2 scenes) and ascendi
Tipologia CRIS:
04.03 Poster in Atti di convegno
Elenco autori:
Refice, Alberto; Bovenga, Fabio
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