Geomorphology of the Anthropocene in Mediterranean urban areas

Author:

Brandolini Pierluigi1ORCID,Cappadonia Chiara2,Luberti Gian Marco3ORCID,Donadio Carlo4ORCID,Stamatopoulos Leonidas5,Di Maggio Cipriano2ORCID,Faccini Francesco1,Stanislao Corrado4,Vergari Francesca6,Paliaga Guido7,Agnesi Valerio2,Alevizos Georgios5,Del Monte Maurizio6

Affiliation:

1. University of Genoa, Italy

2. University of Palermo, Italy

3. Istituto Superiore per la Protezione e la Ricerca Ambientale (ISPRA), Italy

4. University of Naples Federico II, Italy

5. University of Patras, Greece

6. Sapienza University of Rome, Italy

7. CNR IRPI Turin, Italy

Abstract

Urban-geomorphology studies in historical cities provide a significant contribution towards the broad definition of the Anthropocene, perhaps even including its consideration as a new unit of geological time. Specific methodological approaches to recognize and map landforms in urban environments, where human-induced geomorphic processes have often overcome the natural ones, are proposed. This paper reports the results from, and comparison of, studies conducted in coastal historical cities facing the core of the Mediterranean Sea – that is, Genoa, Rome, Naples, Palermo (Italy) and Patras (Greece). Their settlements were facilitated by similar climatic and geographical contexts, with high grounds functional for defence, as well as by the availability of rocks useful as construction materials, which were excavated both in opencast and underground quarries. Over centuries, urbanization has also required the levelling of relief, which was performed by the excavation of heights, filling of depressions and by slope terracing. Consequently, highly modified hydrographic networks, whose streams were dammed, diverted, modified in a culvert or simply buried, characterize the selected cities. Their urban growth, which has been driven by maritime commercial activities, has determined anthropogenic coastal progradation through port and defence or waterfront works. Aggradation of artificial ground has also occurred as a consequence of repeated destruction because of both human and natural events, and subsequent reconstruction even over ruins, buried depressions and shallow cavities. As a result, the selected cities represent anthropogenic landscapes that have been predominately shaped by several human-driven processes, sometimes over centuries. Each landform represents the current result, often from multiple activities with opposing geomorphic effects. Beyond academic progress, we believe that detecting and mapping these landforms and processes should be compulsory, even in risk-assessment urban planning, because of the increase of both hazards and vulnerability as a result of climate-change-induced extreme events and extensive urbanization, respectively.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development

Reference126 articles.

1. Aldrete GS (2007) Floods of the Tiber in Ancient Rome. Baltimore, MD: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 246.

2. The 13 November 2007 rock-fall at Viale Tiziano in Rome (Italy)

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