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Abidin Hasanuddin Z. Djaja Rochman Darmawan Dudy Hadi Samsul Akbar Arifin Rajiyowiryono H. Sudibyo Y. Meilano I. Kasuma M. A. Kahar J. Subarya Cecep 《Natural Hazards》2001,23(2-3):365-387
Jakarta is the capital city of Indonesia with a population of about 10 million people, inhabiting an area of about 25 × 25 km. It has been reported for sometime that locations in Jakarta are subsiding at different rates. Up to the present, there has been no comprehensive information about the characteristics and pattern of land subsidence in the Jakarta area. Usually land subsidence in Jakarta is measured using extensometers and ground water level observations, or estimated using geological and hydrological parameters. To give a better picture about land subsidence, geodetic-based monitoring systems utilizing leveling and GPS surveys have also been implemented.The land subsidence characteristics of Jakarta and its surrounding area areinvestigated using data from three repeated leveling surveys performed in1982, 1991, and 1997, and two repeated GPS surveys conducted in 1997and 1999. Leveling surveys detected subsidence up to about 80 cm duringthe period of 1982–1991, and up to about 160 cm during the 1991–1997period; while GPS surveys observed subsidence up to about 20 cm duringthe period of 1997–1999. Comparison with the hydrological data shows thatland subsidence in Jakarta is strongly related to excessive groundwater extraction. 相似文献
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Land subsidence characteristics of Jakarta between 1997 and 2005, as estimated using GPS surveys 总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4
Hasanuddin Z. Abidin H. Andreas Rochman Djaja Dudy Darmawan M. Gamal 《GPS Solutions》2008,12(1):23-32
Jakarta is the capital city of Indonesia with a population of about 12 million people, inhabiting an area of about 625 km2. It is well known that several areas in Jakarta are subsiding rapidly. There are four different types of land subsidence
that can be expected to occur in the Jakarta basin, namely: subsidence due to groundwater extraction, subsidence induced by
the load of constructions (i.e., settlement of high compressibility soil), subsidence caused by natural consolidation of alluvial
soil and tectonic subsidence. In addition to the leveling method, Global Positioning System (GPS) survey methods have been
used to study land subsidence in Jakarta. In this paper, we characterize subsidence in the Jakarta basin using eight episodic/campaign
GPS surveys between 1997 and 2005. The estimated subsidence rates are 1–10 cm/year. The observed subsidence rates in several
locations show a positive correlation with known abstraction volumes of groundwater extraction. These basin-wide series of
GPS measurements show how this type of measurement can play an important role in multiple public policy decision making in
this rapidly growing area. 相似文献
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