Recent studies have assessed that slope-vegetation-atmosphere, SLVA, interaction may trigger the activity of deep landslides in clayey slopes. In some cases, the presence of an underground aquifer, fed by an upstream hydraulic recharging area, may represent a predisposing factor of such activity, being co-responsible of deep piezometric heads, which can undergo seasonal fluctuations due to the SLVA interaction. In this perspective, the present paper illustrates the results of a scientific research, carried out in a pilot site of the Daunia Apennines, the Fontana Monte slope at Volturino (Foggia, Italy), considered as a prototype of the class of landslide mechanisms controlled by both the rainfall water infiltration and the presence of a water-bearing aquifer in the hillslope. Numerical simulations of the saturated/partially saturated transient seepage flow in the slope have been performed by means of uncoupled hydraulic finite element analyses, with the aim of investigating the sources of large piezometric heads, related to climatic, hydrogeological and hydraulic slope features. The rainfall and evapotranspiration fluxes, the latter defined through the FAO Penman-Monteith method, are both implemented as ground surface input, while seasonal variations of the upstream hydraulic boundary conditions are imposed to predict the seasonal piezometric excursion at shallow and deep monitoring points. The transient seepage results are then used as input for limit equilibrium analyses to assess the influence of the hydraulic settings on the stability of the considered landslide body. The work shows the impact of both climatic and hydraulic factors on the seepage processes, affecting the stability of the slope. Moreover, it is highlighted that the accurate imple- mentation of the upstream hydraulic feeding is fundamental for a reliable prediction of the monitored piezo- metric regime, strictly related to the recharge of the water-bearing aquifer
Assessing the influence of the hydraulic boundary conditions on clay slope stability: The Fontana Monte case study / di Lernia, Annamaria; Cotecchia, Federica; Elia, Gaetano; Tagarelli, Vito; Santaloia, Francesca; Palladino, Giuseppe. - In: ENGINEERING GEOLOGY. - ISSN 0013-7952. - STAMPA. - 297:(2022). [10.1016/j.enggeo.2021.106509]
Assessing the influence of the hydraulic boundary conditions on clay slope stability: The Fontana Monte case study
di Lernia, Annamaria
;Cotecchia, Federica;Elia, Gaetano;Tagarelli, Vito;
2022-01-01
Abstract
Recent studies have assessed that slope-vegetation-atmosphere, SLVA, interaction may trigger the activity of deep landslides in clayey slopes. In some cases, the presence of an underground aquifer, fed by an upstream hydraulic recharging area, may represent a predisposing factor of such activity, being co-responsible of deep piezometric heads, which can undergo seasonal fluctuations due to the SLVA interaction. In this perspective, the present paper illustrates the results of a scientific research, carried out in a pilot site of the Daunia Apennines, the Fontana Monte slope at Volturino (Foggia, Italy), considered as a prototype of the class of landslide mechanisms controlled by both the rainfall water infiltration and the presence of a water-bearing aquifer in the hillslope. Numerical simulations of the saturated/partially saturated transient seepage flow in the slope have been performed by means of uncoupled hydraulic finite element analyses, with the aim of investigating the sources of large piezometric heads, related to climatic, hydrogeological and hydraulic slope features. The rainfall and evapotranspiration fluxes, the latter defined through the FAO Penman-Monteith method, are both implemented as ground surface input, while seasonal variations of the upstream hydraulic boundary conditions are imposed to predict the seasonal piezometric excursion at shallow and deep monitoring points. The transient seepage results are then used as input for limit equilibrium analyses to assess the influence of the hydraulic settings on the stability of the considered landslide body. The work shows the impact of both climatic and hydraulic factors on the seepage processes, affecting the stability of the slope. Moreover, it is highlighted that the accurate imple- mentation of the upstream hydraulic feeding is fundamental for a reliable prediction of the monitored piezo- metric regime, strictly related to the recharge of the water-bearing aquiferI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.