Analysis of the Geological Controls and Kinematics of the Chgega Landslide (Mateur, Tunisia) Exploiting Photogrammetry and InSAR Technologies
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Gaidi, Seifeddine; Galve Arnedo, Jorge Pedro; Ruano Roca, Patricia; Reyes Carmona, Cristina; Pérez Peña, José Vicente; Azañón Hernández, José Miguel; Booth Rea, GuillermoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Landslide Rock spread UAV-DP InSAR GEP Geomorphosite Tunisia
Date
2021Referencia bibliográfica
Gaidi, S.; Galve, J.P.; Melki, F.; Ruano, P.; Reyes-Carmona, C.; Marzougui, W.; Devoto, S.; Pérez-Peña, J.V.; Azañón, J.M.; Chouaieb, H.; et al. Analysis of the Geological Controls and Kinematics of the Chgega Landslide (Mateur, Tunisia) Exploiting Photogrammetry and InSAR Technologies. Remote Sens. 2021, 13, 4048. https://doi.org/ 10.3390/rs13204048
Sponsorship
The work of J.P.G., P.R., J.V.P.-P., J.M.A., and G.B.-R. was supported by the “Ramón y Cajal” Programme (RYC-2017-23335) of the Spanish Ministry of Science, the project “MORPHOMED”-PID2019-107138RB-I00/SRA (State Research Agency/10.13039/501100011033) and the project “RADANDALUS” (P18-RT-3632), and B-RNM-305- UGR1818 of the FEDER/Junta de Andalucía-Consejería de Transformación Económica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades. The access to the Geohazard Exploitation Platform (GEP) of the European Space Agency (ESA) was provided by the Early Adopters Programme. The UAV campaign was carried out with the financial support of the company “Falck Group” (Italy). This study was supported by research projects CGL2015-67130-C2-1-R, Erasmus Mundus External Cooperation Window, and by Scientific Cooperation Agreement 0534 between the Office National des Mines (ONM), the Tunis el Manar University, and the Group for Relief and Active Processes Analysis (ARPA) from the University of GranadaAbstract
Exploration of territories not previously analyzed by landslide experts provides interesting
findings. The Chgega landslide, in northern Tunisia, represents a paradigmatic mass movement. It
can be classified as a complex landslide, or more specifically as vast rock spreading that evolved
into a block slide. It involves a great block of limestone—about 900 m long and 400 m wide—sliding
over ductile clays and marls. The viscoplastic creep of the clays drives the landslide and creates,
in its crown, a graben ~800 m long and ~120 m wide that breaks the summit of Chgega Mountain.
Using Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) technologies, we demonstrate that this
complex landslide is currently active and moreover shows progressive movement without clear
episodic accelerations. The velocity of the limestone block is just above 2 mm/yr. The occurrence
of gravity-induced joints indicates that the movement has an orientation towards 333◦ of azimuth
on average, conditioned by the landscape around Chgega. These results were obtained through the
analysis of a 3D model and a high-resolution orthoimage created from photographs acquired by an
Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV). We may conclude that the landslide movement is determined by
normal faults with directions N060◦E and N140–150◦E. This characterization of the Chgega landslide
can serve as the basis for future studies about the origin of this slope movement. Furthermore,
the data provided here may support the recognition of Chgega as a singular geological point that
deserves to be declared a geosite.