Abstract
Abstract. In the last decades, in Campania (southern
Italy), steep slopes mantled by loose air-fall pyroclastic soils
have been the seat of shallow, fast, rainfall-induced landslides. The
occurrence of such events has been the result of the combination of critical
rainstorms and of unfavourable initial conditions determined by antecedent
infiltration, evaporation, and drainage processes. In order to understand the nature of the phenomena at hand and to clarify
the role of all influencing factors, an automatic monitoring station has
been installed in an area already subject to a recent killer flowslide
(December, 1999). The paper reports data collected in 2011 about volumetric
water content and suction (used to investigate the soil water retention
features) and rainfall depth and temperature (providing the boundary
conditions). In particular, the installation at the same depths of
tensiometers and time domain reflectometry (TDR) sensors allowed us to
recognise the hysteretic nature of the wetting and drying soil response to
weather forcing and its influence on the slope stability conditions. The data reported in the paper are freely available at
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4281166 (Comegna et al., 2020).
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Cited by
8 articles.
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