Landslide Research at the British Geological Survey:Capture,Storage and Interpretation on a National and Site-Specific Scale |
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Authors: | Catherine PENNINGTON Claire FOSTER Jonathan CHAMBERS Gareth JENKINS British Geological Survey Keyworth Nottinghamshire NG GG UK |
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Affiliation: | British Geological Survey, Keyworth, Nottinghamshire, NG12 5GG, UK |
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Abstract: | Landslide research at the British Geological Survey (BGS) is carried out through a number of activities, including surveying, database development and real‐time monitoring of landslides. Landslide mapping across the UK has been carried out since BGS started geological mapping in 1835. Today, BGS geologists use a combination of remote sensing and ground‐based investigations to survey landslides. The development of waterproof tablet computers (BGS·SIGMAmobile), with inbuilt GPS and GIS for field data capture provides an accurate and rapid mapping methodology for field surveys. Regional and national mapping of landslides is carried out in conjunction with site‐specific monitoring, using terrestrial LiDAR and differential GPS technologies, which BGS has successfully developed for this application. In addition to surface monitoring, BGS is currently developing geophysical ground‐imaging systems for landslide monitoring, which provide real‐time information on subsurface changes prior to failure events. BGS's mapping and monitoring activities directly feed into the BGS National Landslide Database, the most extensive source of information on landslides in Great Britain. It currently holds over 14 000 records of landslide events. By combining BGS's corporate datasets with expert knowledge, BGS has developed a landslide hazard assessment tool, GeoSure, which provides information on the relative landslide hazard susceptibility at national scale. |
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Keywords: | landslide National Landslide Database GeoSure hazard LiDAR geophysics |
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