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Field experiment on the spatiotemporal evolution of soil moisture in a rainfall-induced loess landslide: Implications for early warning

•Monitoring hydro-evolution of an artificial rainfall-induced loess landslide by tl-3D-ERT.•Slope experienced a movement process of initiation, acceleration, and deceleration.•Slope wetting showed substantial spatiotemporal heterogeneity.•Variability of 3D hydro-evolution is an essential indicator o...

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Published in:Journal of hydrology (Amsterdam) 2024-02, Vol.630, p.130777, Article 130777
Main Authors: Chen, Guan, Bian, Shiqiang, Ma, Jianhua, Meng, Xingmin, Shi, Wei, Wu, Jie, Zhang, Yi, Li, Yajun
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Monitoring hydro-evolution of an artificial rainfall-induced loess landslide by tl-3D-ERT.•Slope experienced a movement process of initiation, acceleration, and deceleration.•Slope wetting showed substantial spatiotemporal heterogeneity.•Variability of 3D hydro-evolution is an essential indicator of slope movement trend. Rainfall can increase the moisture content of a slope, which changes its mechanical properties and thus acts as an important mechanism to trigger landslides. However, it is unclear how moisture contents vary in space and time during rainfall-induced slope movements, and which soil-wetting patterns precede landslide events. Here, we used point sensors and time-lapse 3D electrical resistivity tomography (tl-3D-ERT) technology to monitor the spatiotemporal evolution of the hydrology and movement within a rainfall-induced loess landslide. We observed that movement of the slope involved a semi-continuous process of initiation, acceleration, and deceleration to stabilization. The slope hydrology evolution suggested that initial saturation, dominant flow, and changes in slope recharge and drainage owing to internal seepage and erosion are important factors that affect moisture changes. The movement accelerated when the average saturation value and spatial variation in moisture distribution within the slope increased; however, the movement decelerated when both parameters did not change significantly with time. The accumulation and dissipation of pore water pressure within the slope owing to uneven humidification may be the underlying cause of changes in landslide movement. Our study demonstrates the potential of tl-3D-ERT for monitoring the spatiotemporal variability of moisture evolution within rainfall-induced landslides to determine landslide deformation trends and develop a landslide early warning system.
ISSN:0022-1694
1879-2707
DOI:10.1016/j.jhydrol.2024.130777