Title
Inventory of large landslides along the Central Western Andes (ca. 15°–20° S): Landslide distribution patterns and insights on controlling factors
Date Issued
01 June 2022
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
The western flank of the Central Andes hosts some of the largest terrestrial landslides (v > km3), which morphologies are particularly well-preserved due to low erosion rates related to the hyper-arid climate prevailing in this region since the Miocene. First-order questions are pending about the factors controlling the development and the triggering of those large-scale slope failures. Previous studies provided some geomorphological analysis and dating on individual study cases, but a regional-scale vision of landslide processes long the Central Western Andes is missing. Here we report an original inventory of large landslides (areas from 0.1 to 180 km2) established along the western flank of the Central Andes between latitudes ca. 15 and 20° S, and from the Pacific coast to the Altiplano. Based on manual mapping (using satellite images analysis, Google Earth and DEMs analysis) and a compilation of previous works, we inventoried more than a thousand large landslides in this region. We then statistically explored the database according to the landslides typology, size, abundance and relation to geologic, tectonic and climatic settings of the Central Western Andes in order to provide a first insight on their controlling factors. Landslide size-frequency distribution follows a power-law with an exponent of 2.31 ± 0.16 and a cut-off of 4.0 ± 1.9 km2 showing a strong contribution of the largest landslides to the cumulated landslide area. We revealed a dominance of rockslide typology (86%) characterized by in-mass slides, the rest being rock-avalanche type (14%) marked by typical granular-flow morphologies. Combination of specific lithology and great local relief emerge as favorable conditioning factor for large landslide initiation, in particular in the case of river incisions though ignimbrites of the Paleogene-Neogene (Huaylillas Formation), concentrating >30% of the landslides. Moreover, landslide clusters tend to follow crustal faults networks suggesting a long-term control of tectonic activity. Most of the identified landslides are paleo events. We tentatively argue that their triggering could not have been possible in the current hyper-arid conditions of the Atacama Desert and its periphery. Future research providing dating on some of the landslide clusters identified in this study is needed to explore possible temporal correlations between periods of landslide activity and external seismic and/or climatic cycles.
Volume
116
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Investigación climática Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas Geología
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85129295747
Source
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
ISSN of the container
08959811
Sponsor(s)
All the data used to perform this study are available in the paper and in the supplemental material. This research is part of the PhD project of Fabrizio Delgado, and also belong to agreement between IRD and INGEMMET. This work was supported by the PhD fellowship program of the EDFPCIG , by the TelluS and Alea Programs of CNRS /INSU and by the CONCYTEC / FONDECYT in the framework of the call Movilizaciones con ECOS Nord-Perú 2019–01 008–2020 . We acknowledge the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) for providing the TANDEM-X DEM. We sincerely acknowledge the anonymous Reviewer and German Aguilar, who provided detailed comments that significantly helped to clarify our interpretations and a previous version of this manuscript.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus Instituto Geológico Minero y Metalúrgico