• Metadata Catalogue
  •  
  •  
  •  

Dip Slope - Hazard Mapping of Nepal's Gorkha Earthquake 2015 induced landslide Dams

Large landslide dams are one of the most disastrous natural phenomena in mountainous regions all over the world Such dams are formed most commonly in tectonically active settings where high mountains border narrow and steep valleys and earthquakes occur frequently. Landslide dams are very diverse in terms of their formation, geotechnical characteristics, longevity, stability, and flood hazard. The two major causes of landslide dam formation are precipitation and earthquake. About 50% of dam-forming landslides are brought about by rainstorms and snowmelts, 40% by earthquakes, and 10% by other factors Geometry of valley in relation to geometry and volume of debris and discharge of damming river are some of the factors which are responsible for the development of landslide dams. Schuster et al. (1998) mentioned four groups of governing factors responsible for the spatial distribution of landslide dams. They are i) seismic intensity, ii) slope gradient and topography, iii) lithology and weathering properties, and iv) soil moisture and groundwater content. Landslide dams are generated by various types of mass movements, which range from rock falls and rockslides in steep walled, narrow canyons to earth slumps in flat river lowlands. Managing landslide-dam hazards requires an understanding of the temporal and spatial scales on which such phenomena occur. Many previous works on landslide dams have been mainly descriptive in character, and have produced a multitude of documented case studies and inventories (e.g. Costa and Schuster, 1988; Costa and Schuster, 1991). More recent work is focused on quantitative methods of determining the post-formation development, in particular, the controls on dam longevity.

Simple

Date ( Publication )
2015-09-22
Author
  Central Department of Geology, Tribhuvan University - Prof. Dr. Megh Raj Dhital ( Professor )
Nepal
977-1-5275222
Purpose
The purpose of the study was to identify the possible landslide and landslide dams due to 2015 Gorkha Earthquake
Credit
This dataset has been developed by SERVIR Himalaya. SERVIR is a joint USAID-NASA project. For more information on SERVIR, visit http://www.servirglobal.net. For references, use: International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), SERVIR Himalaya.
Status
Completed
Maintenance and update frequency
As needed
GEOSS THEME ( Theme )
  • Landslide
  • Landslide Dam
  • Coseismic Landslide
  • Earthquake
  • Geohazards
  • Rockslide
  • Safety Factors
  • icimod-servir
  • servircat
  • Geo-disasters
  • Dip Slope
Keywords ( Place )
  • Gorkha
  • Nepal
Use limitation
geossDataCore
Use limitation
Free to use with attribution to the source. Suggested citation: ICIMOD. (2015). Dip Slope - Hazard Mapping of Nepal's Gorkha Earthquake 2015 induced landslide Dams [Data set]. ICIMOD. https://doi.org/10.26066/rds.24682
Use limitation
The SERVIR Project, NASA, USAID and ICIMOD make no express or implied warranty of this data as to the merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose. Neither the US Government nor its contractors shall be liable for special, consequential or incidental damages attributed to this data.
Use limitation
Users are permitted to copy, use, adapt, and redistribute SERVIR data without limitations. SERVIR encourages users to keep any adapted or redistributed versions of this data freely available for public use.
Access constraints
Copyright
Use constraints
Copyright
Distance
30  m
Metadata language
eng
Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Geoscientific information
N
S
E
W
thumbnail


Reference system identifier
WGS 1984
Distributor
  ICIMOD -
Hierarchy level
Dataset
File identifier
a2702533-c5e6-4b6d-8411-c663d5243fc9 XML
Metadata language
eng
Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Date stamp
2020-09-08T14:34:18
Metadata standard name
North American Profile of ISO 19115:2003
Author
  ICIMOD - Mr. Samjwal Ratna Bajracharya ( Remote Sensing Specialist )
 
 

Overviews

overview
thumbnail
overview
large_thumbnail

Spatial extent

thumbnail

Keywords

GEOSS THEME
Coseismic Landslide Dip Slope Earthquake Geo-disasters Geohazards Landslide Landslide Dam Rockslide Safety Factors icimod-servir servircat

Provided by

logo
Access to the portal
Read here the full details and access to the data.

Associated resources

Not available


  •  
  •  
  •