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Rain-induced debris and mudflow triggering factors assessment in the Santiago cordilleran foothills, Central Chile

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2008-11
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Sepúlveda Valenzuela, Sergio
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Rain-induced debris and mudflow triggering factors assessment in the Santiago cordilleran foothills, Central Chile
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Author
  • Sepúlveda Valenzuela, Sergio;
  • Padilla, Cristóbal;
Abstract
Debris and mudflows are some of the main geological hazards in the mountain foothills of the Chilean capital city of Santiago. There, the risk of flows triggered in the basins of ravines that drain the range into the city increases with time due to the city growth. A multivariate statistical study based on the logistic regression method is presented. The model provides equations that allow the computation of combined meteorological triggering factors associated with a probability of rain-induced flow occurrence. Daily rainfall, accumulated rainfall and the snowfall level, traditionally considered as the relevant factors, are analysed for a 25-year period. The results show a strong relevance of the rainfall on the day of the flow event over the other factors. However, the relatively low probabilities returned for some real flow events suggest that the model does not capture all the significant variables and the problem is more complex than as it has been traditionally assumed, and further investigations are needed to develop predictive models of flow triggering.
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This work has been funded by the Fundacio´n Andes Project C-14060/14.
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/125177
ISSN: 0921-030X
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NATURAL HAZARDS, Volume: 47, Issue: 2, Pages: 201-215, 2008
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