Abstract
Abstract. Throughout history, the socio-economic development of the city of Rome has been intertwined with the magnitude and frequency of flooding events from the Tiber, one of Italy's largest rivers. Ancient Rome mostly developed on the hills, while the Tiber's floodplain was mainly exploited for agricultural purposes. A few small communities did settle in the riparian areas of the Tiber, but they had a relatively peaceful relationship with the frequent occurrence of flooding events. Instead, numerous people live nowadays in modern districts in the Tiber's floodplain, unaware of their exposure to potentially catastrophic flooding. This research work aims to explore the dynamics of changing flood risk between these two opposite pictures of ancient and contemporary Rome. To this end, we carried out a socio-hydrological study by using long time series of hydrological (extreme flood events) and social (human population dynamics) processes, along with information about human interactions with the environment (flood defence structures). The historical analysis showed how human and water systems have been co-evolving over time, while being abruptly altered by the occurrence of an extreme flood event in 1870, just before Rome became the capital of a recently unified Italy. The outcomes of this study were then compared to the results of a socio-hydrological model simulating the dynamics emerging from the mutual shaping of floods and societies.
Reference26 articles.
1. Aldrete, G. S.: Floods of the Tiber in Ancient Rome, Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007.
2. Alfieri, L., Feyen, L., and Di Baldassarre, G.: Increasing flood risk under climate change: a pan-European assessment of the benefits of four adaptation strategies, Climatic Change, 136, 507–521, https://doi.org/10.1007/s10584-016-1641-1, 2016.
3. Anastasio, T. J., Ehrenberger, K. A., Watson, P., and Zhang, W.: Individual and collective memory consolidation: Analogous processes on different levels, MIT Press, 2012.
4. Calenda, G., Mancini, C. P., and Volpi, E.: Selection of the probabilistic model of extreme floods: The case of the River Tiber in Rome, J. Hydrol., 371, 1–11, 2009.
5. Casacchia, O. and Crisci, M.: La popolazione dell'area metropolitana di Roma. Evoluzione demografica e previsione al 2024, IRPPS-CNR Working Paper Series, 56, luglio, 1–78, 2013.
Cited by
22 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献