NH44B-06
Landslide Hazard from Coupled Inherent and Dynamic Probabilities

Thursday, 17 December 2015: 17:15
309 (Moscone South)
Ronda L Strauch, University of Washington Seattle Campus, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Seattle, WA, United States and Erkan Istanbulluoglu, University of Washington Seattle Campus, Seattle, WA, United States
Abstract:
Landslide hazard research has typically been conducted independently from hydroclimate research. We sought to unify these two lines of research to provide regional scale landslide hazard information for risk assessments and resource management decision-making. Our approach couples an empirical inherent landslide probability, based on a frequency ratio analysis, with a numerical dynamic probability, generated by combining subsurface water recharge and surface runoff from the Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC) macro-scale land surface hydrologic model with a finer resolution probabilistic slope stability model. Landslide hazard mapping is advanced by combining static and dynamic models of stability into a probabilistic measure of geohazard prediction in both space and time. This work will aid resource management decision-making in current and future landscape and climatic conditions. The approach is applied as a case study in North Cascade National Park Complex in northern Washington State.