A near-real-time model for estimating probability of road obstruction due to earthquake-triggered landslides

Author:

Wilson Bradley12ORCID,Allstadt Kate E1ORCID,Thompson Eric M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey Geologic Hazards Science Center, Golden, CO, USA

2. Department of Public Administration, National Center for Integrated Coastal Research, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA

Abstract

Coseismic landslides are a major source of transportation disruption in mountainous areas, but few approaches exist for rapidly estimating impacts to road networks. We develop a model that links the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) near-real-time earthquake-triggered landslide hazard model with Open Street Map (OSM) road network data to rapidly estimate segment-level obstruction risk following major earthquake activity worldwide. To train and validate the model, we process OSM data for 15 historical earthquakes and calculate the average segment-level landslide hazard from the USGS model for each event. We then fit a multivariate adaptive regression spline model for the probability of road obstruction as a function of road segment length and landslide hazard, using a training and validation dataset derived from the intersections of road networks with earthquake-triggered landslide inventories. The resulting probabilistic model is well calibrated across a range of earthquake events, with estimated obstruction probabilities matching the relative frequency of potential road obstructions. The model runs quickly and is capable of producing road segment-level obstruction estimates within minutes to hours of a major earthquake. However, in near-real-time application, the accuracy of the obstruction estimates will be dependent on the quality of the ShakeMap shaking estimates, which often improves with time as more information becomes available after the earthquake. By providing a rapid first-order translation of landslide hazard into potential infrastructure impacts, this model helps provide emergency responders with tangible information on initial areas of concern.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Geophysics,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology

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