Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

La Pintada landslide—A complex double-staged extreme event, Guerrero, Mexico

2017; Cogent OA; Volume: 3; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/23312041.2017.1356012

ISSN

2331-2041

Autores

María Teresa Ramírez‐Herrera, Krzysztof Gaidzik,

Tópico(s)

Fire effects on ecosystems

Resumo

Extreme storms commonly trigger landslides in regions of humid, warm tropical climate causing loss of life and economic devastation. The tropical mountainous areas of Guerrero in southwest Mexico are frequently hit by extreme hurricanes and cyclones and thus prone to landslides. On 16 September 2013, a huge landslide resulted in 71 fatalities and destroyed a large part of La Pintada Village. We applied remote sensing techniques using the LIDAR DEM and high-resolution images of the La Pintada area, a post-landslide field survey, geotechnical laboratory tests of colluvium material from the landslide, and a slope stability analysis. We also interviewed eyewitnesses accounts of the event. Our results suggest that the 2013 La Pintada landslide was a complex and two-stage event. An intense four-day-long rainfall event related to the landfall of Hurricane Manuel resulted in the oversaturation of soil, which was the main factor that caused the landslide. The effect of rainfall was amplified by the lack of high and dense vegetation on the 250-m-high slope. The lack of vegetation and slope-under-cutting likely contributed to the decreased slope stability. We suggest that increased intensity of extreme storms has contributed to increased landslides in this area. Furthermore, in tropical climate areas, where significant population lives in mostly developing countries, the combination of these phenomena makes them highly vulnerable to extreme storms and landslide hazards.

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