Title
Landslides induced by the 2017 Mw7.3 Sarpol Zahab earthquake (Iran)
Date Issued
01 March 2022
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Université Savoie Mont Blanc
Publisher(s)
Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Abstract
Landslides are the main secondary effects of earthquakes in mountainous areas. The spatial distribution of these landslides is controlled by the local seismic ground motion and the local slope stability. While gravitational instabilities in arid and semi-arid environments are understudied, we document the landslides triggered by the Sarpol Zahab earthquake (November 12, 2017, Mw7.3, Iran/Iraq border), the largest event ever recorded in the semi-arid Zagros Mountains. An original earthquake-induced landslide inventory was derived, encompassing landslides of various sizes and velocities (from rapid disrupted rockfalls to slow-moving coherent landslides). This inventory confirms the low level of triggered landslides in semi-arid environments. It also displays clear differences in the spatial and volumetric distributions of earthquake-induced landslides, having 386 rockfalls of limited size triggered around the epicenter, and 9 giant (areas of ca. 106 m2) active and ancient deep-seated landslides coseismically accelerated at locations up to 180 km from the epicenter. This unusual distant triggering is discussed and interpreted as an interaction between the earthquake source properties and the local geological conditions, emphasizing the key role of seismic ground motion variability at short spatial scales in triggering landslides. Finally, the study documents the kinematics of slow-moving ancient landslides accelerated by earthquakes, and opens up new perspectives for studying landslide triggering over short (~ 1–10 years) and long-time (~ 1000–10,000 years) periods.
Start page
603
End page
619
Volume
19
Issue
3
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
GeologĂa
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85122868106
Source
Landslides
ISSN of the container
1612510X
Sponsor(s)
This research is funded by the Lebanese National Council for Scientific Research (CNRS). The authors also thank the support of the French Spatial Agency (CNES).
Sources of information:
Directorio de ProducciĂłn CientĂfica
Scopus