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29 pages, 5254 KiB  
Article
Hydro-Meteorological Landslide Inventory for Sustainable Urban Management in a Coastal Region of Brazil
by Paulo Rodolpho Pereira Hader, Isabela Taici Lopes Gonçalves Horta, Victor Arroyo da Silva do Valle and Clemente Irigaray
Sustainability 2025, 17(16), 7487; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17167487 - 19 Aug 2025
Viewed by 284
Abstract
Comprehensive, standardised, multi-temporal inventories of rainfall-induced landslides linked to soil moisture remain scarce, especially in tropical regions. Addressing this gap, we present a multi-source urban inventory for Brazil’s Baixada Santista region (1988–2024). A key advance is the introduction of geographical and temporal confidence [...] Read more.
Comprehensive, standardised, multi-temporal inventories of rainfall-induced landslides linked to soil moisture remain scarce, especially in tropical regions. Addressing this gap, we present a multi-source urban inventory for Brazil’s Baixada Santista region (1988–2024). A key advance is the introduction of geographical and temporal confidence classifications, which indicates precisely how each landslide’s location and occurrence date are known, thereby addressing a previously overlooked criterion in Brazil’s landslide data treatment. The inventory comprises 2534 records categorised by spatial (G1–G3) and temporal (T1–T3) confidence. Notable findings include the following: (i) confidence classifications enhance inventory reliability for research and early warning, though precise temporal data remains challenging; (ii) multi-source integration with UAV validation is key to robust inventories in urban tropical regions; (iii) soil moisture complements rainfall-based warnings, but requires local calibration for satellite-derived estimates; (iv) data gaps and biases underscore the need for standardised landslide documentation; and (v) the framework is transferable, providing a scalable model for Brazil and worldwide. Despite limitations, the inventory provides a foundation for (i) susceptibility and hazard modelling; (ii) empirical thresholds for early warning; and (iii) climate-related trend analyses. Overall, the framework offers a sustainable, practical, transferable method for worldwide and contributes to strengthening disaster information systems and early warning capacities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Landslide Hazards and Soil Erosion)
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30 pages, 8663 KiB  
Article
The Impact of Feature Selection on XGBoost Performance in Landslide Susceptibility Mapping Using an Extended Set of Features: A Case Study from Southern Poland
by Kamila Pawłuszek-Filipiak and Tymon Lewandowski
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(16), 8955; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15168955 - 14 Aug 2025
Viewed by 233
Abstract
Landslides are among the most frequent and dangerous natural hazards, posing serious threats to life and infrastructure. To mitigate their impacts, landslide susceptibility mapping (LSM) plays a crucial role by identifying areas prone to future landslide occurrences. This study aimed to assess how [...] Read more.
Landslides are among the most frequent and dangerous natural hazards, posing serious threats to life and infrastructure. To mitigate their impacts, landslide susceptibility mapping (LSM) plays a crucial role by identifying areas prone to future landslide occurrences. This study aimed to assess how the choice of feature selection methods influences the performance of LSM models based on the eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) algorithm when an extended set of input variables is used. Two study areas located in Southern Poland, called Biały Dunajec and Rożnów, were selected for analysis. These regions differ in terrain, elevation, and environmental characteristics and are situated approximately 65 km apart. Three widely used feature selection techniques were applied: the Pearson correlation coefficient (PCC), symmetrical uncertainty (SU), and analysis of variance (ANOVA). For each method, XGBoost models were trained and evaluated using multiple performance metrics, including the area under the curve (AUC), overall accuracy, precision, recall, and F1-score. The highest AUC values were achieved using the PCC method: 0.985 for Biały Dunajec and 0.983 for Rożnów. The best overall performance (accuracy of 0.93, recall of 0.94, and F1-score of 0.79) was obtained for the Rożnów case study using PCC features. These findings highlight that, when a comprehensive set of input variables is used, the exclusion of less informative features has little effect on model accuracy, as their information is largely preserved within the retained features. Full article
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27 pages, 4588 KiB  
Article
Remote Sensing as a Sentinel for Safeguarding European Critical Infrastructure in the Face of Natural Disasters
by Miguel A. Belenguer-Plomer, Omar Barrilero, Paula Saameño, Inês Mendes, Michele Lazzarini, Sergio Albani, Naji El Beyrouthy, Mario Al Sayah, Nathan Rueche, Abla Mimi Edjossan-Sossou, Tommaso Monopoli, Edoardo Arnaudo and Gianfranco Caputo
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(16), 8908; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15168908 - 13 Aug 2025
Viewed by 297
Abstract
Critical infrastructure, such as transport networks, energy facilities, and urban installations, is increasingly vulnerable to natural hazards and climate change. Remote sensing technologies, namely satellite imagery, offer solutions for monitoring, evaluating, and enhancing the resilience of these vital assets. This paper explores how [...] Read more.
Critical infrastructure, such as transport networks, energy facilities, and urban installations, is increasingly vulnerable to natural hazards and climate change. Remote sensing technologies, namely satellite imagery, offer solutions for monitoring, evaluating, and enhancing the resilience of these vital assets. This paper explores how applications based on synthetic aperture radar (SAR) and optical satellite imagery contribute to the protection of critical infrastructure by enabling near real-time monitoring and early detection of natural hazards for actionable insights across various European critical infrastructure sectors. Case studies demonstrate the integration of remote sensing data into geographic information systems (GISs) for promoting situational awareness, risk assessment, and predictive modeling of natural disasters. These include floods, landslides, wildfires, and earthquakes. Accordingly, this study underlines the role of remote sensing in supporting long-term infrastructure planning and climate adaptation strategies. The presented work supports the goals of the European Union (EU-HORIZON)-sponsored ATLANTIS project, which focuses on strengthening the resilience of critical EU infrastructures by providing authorities and civil protection services with effective tools for managing natural hazards. Full article
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21 pages, 1344 KiB  
Article
Research on Intelligent Extraction Method of Influencing Factors of Loess Landslide Geological Disasters Based on Soft-Lexicon and GloVe
by Lutong Huang, Yueqin Zhu, Yingfei Li, Tianxiao Yan, Yu Xiao, Dongqi Wei, Ziyao Xing and Jian Li
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(16), 8879; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15168879 - 12 Aug 2025
Viewed by 164
Abstract
Loess landslide disasters are influenced by a multitude of factors, including slope conditions, triggering mechanisms, and spatial attributes. Extracting these factors from unstructured geological texts is challenging due to nested entities, semantic ambiguity, and rare domain-specific terms. This study proposes a joint extraction [...] Read more.
Loess landslide disasters are influenced by a multitude of factors, including slope conditions, triggering mechanisms, and spatial attributes. Extracting these factors from unstructured geological texts is challenging due to nested entities, semantic ambiguity, and rare domain-specific terms. This study proposes a joint extraction framework guided by a domain ontology that categorizes six types of loess landslide influencing factors, including spatial relationships. The ontology facilitates conceptual classification and semi-automatic nested entity annotation, enabling the construction of a high-quality corpus with eight tag types. The model integrates a Soft-Lexicon mechanism that enhances character-level GloVe embeddings with explicit lexical features, including domain terms, part-of-speech tags, and word boundary indicators derived from a domain-specific lexicon. The resulting hybrid character-level representations are then fed into a BiLSTM-CRF architecture to jointly extract entities, attributes, and multi-level spatial and causal relationships. Extracted results are structured using a content-knowledge model to build a spatially enriched knowledge graph, supporting semantic queries and intelligent reasoning. Experimental results demonstrate improved performance over baseline methods, showcasing the framework’s effectiveness in geohazard information extraction and disaster risk analysis. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Applications of Big Data and Artificial Intelligence in Geoscience)
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36 pages, 12384 KiB  
Article
A Soil Moisture-Informed Seismic Landslide Model Using SMAP Satellite Data
by Ali Farahani and Majid Ghayoomi
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(15), 2671; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17152671 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 579
Abstract
Earthquake-triggered landslides pose significant hazards to lives and infrastructure. While existing seismic landslide models primarily focus on seismic and terrain variables, they often overlook the dynamic nature of hydrologic conditions, such as seasonal soil moisture variability. This study addresses this gap by incorporating [...] Read more.
Earthquake-triggered landslides pose significant hazards to lives and infrastructure. While existing seismic landslide models primarily focus on seismic and terrain variables, they often overlook the dynamic nature of hydrologic conditions, such as seasonal soil moisture variability. This study addresses this gap by incorporating satellite-based soil moisture data from NASA’s Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission into the assessment of seismic landslide occurrence. Using landslide inventories from five major earthquakes (Nepal 2015, New Zealand 2016, Papua New Guinea 2018, Indonesia 2018, and Haiti 2021), a balanced global dataset of landslide and non-landslide cases was compiled. Exploratory analysis revealed a strong association between elevated pre-event soil moisture and increased landslide occurrence, supporting its relevance in seismic slope failure. Moreover, a Random Forest model was trained and tested on the dataset and demonstrated excellent predictive performance. To assess the generalizability of the model, a leave-one-earthquake-out cross-validation approach was also implemented, in which the model trained on four events was tested on the fifth. This approach outperformed comparable models that did not consider soil moisture, such as the United States Geological Survey (USGS) seismic landslide model, confirming the added value of satellite-based soil moisture data in improving seismic landslide susceptibility assessments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Satellite Soil Moisture Estimation, Assessment, and Applications)
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27 pages, 39231 KiB  
Article
Study on the Distribution Characteristics of Thermal Melt Geological Hazards in Qinghai Based on Remote Sensing Interpretation Method
by Xing Zhang, Zongren Li, Sailajia Wei, Delin Li, Xiaomin Li, Rongfang Xin, Wanrui Hu, Heng Liu and Peng Guan
Water 2025, 17(15), 2295; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152295 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 331
Abstract
In recent years, large-scale linear infrastructure developments have been developed across hundreds of kilometers of permafrost regions on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. The implementation of major engineering projects, including the Qinghai–Tibet Highway, oil pipelines, communication cables, and the Qinghai–Tibet Railway, has spurred intensified research [...] Read more.
In recent years, large-scale linear infrastructure developments have been developed across hundreds of kilometers of permafrost regions on the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. The implementation of major engineering projects, including the Qinghai–Tibet Highway, oil pipelines, communication cables, and the Qinghai–Tibet Railway, has spurred intensified research into permafrost dynamics. Climate warming has accelerated permafrost degradation, leading to a range of geological hazards, most notably widespread thermokarst landslides. This study investigates the spatiotemporal distribution patterns and influencing factors of thermokarst landslides in Qinghai Province through an integrated approach combining field surveys, remote sensing interpretation, and statistical analysis. The study utilized multi-source datasets, including Landsat-8 imagery, Google Earth, GF-1, and ZY-3 satellite data, supplemented by meteorological records and geospatial information. The remote sensing interpretation identified 1208 cryogenic hazards in Qinghai’s permafrost regions, comprising 273 coarse-grained soil landslides, 346 fine-grained soil landslides, 146 thermokarst slope failures, 440 gelifluction flows, and 3 frost mounds. Spatial analysis revealed clusters of hazards in Zhiduo, Qilian, and Qumalai counties, with the Yangtze River Basin and Qilian Mountains showing the highest hazard density. Most hazards occur in seasonally frozen ground areas (3500–3900 m and 4300–4900 m elevation ranges), predominantly on north and northwest-facing slopes with gradients of 10–20°. Notably, hazard frequency decreases with increasing permafrost stability. These findings provide critical insights for the sustainable development of cold-region infrastructure, environmental protection, and hazard mitigation strategies in alpine engineering projects. Full article
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44 pages, 58273 KiB  
Article
Geological Hazard Susceptibility Assessment Based on the Combined Weighting Method: A Case Study of Xi’an City, China
by Peng Li, Wei Sun, Chang-Rao Li, Ning Nan and Sheng-Rui Su
Geosciences 2025, 15(8), 290; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences15080290 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 372
Abstract
Xi’an, China, has a complex geological environment, with geological hazards seriously hindering urban development and safety. This study analyzed the conditions leading to disaster formation and screened 12 evaluation factors (e.g., slope and slope direction) using Spearman’s correlation. Furthermore, it also introduced an [...] Read more.
Xi’an, China, has a complex geological environment, with geological hazards seriously hindering urban development and safety. This study analyzed the conditions leading to disaster formation and screened 12 evaluation factors (e.g., slope and slope direction) using Spearman’s correlation. Furthermore, it also introduced an innovative combined weighting method, integrating subjective weights from the hierarchical analysis method and objective weights from the entropy method, as well as an information value model for susceptibility assessment. The main results are as follows: (1) There are 787 hazard points—landslides/collapses are concentrated in loess areas and Qinling foothills, while subsidence/fissures are concentrated in plains. (2) The combined weighting method effectively overcame the limitations of single methods. (3) Validation using hazard density and ROC curves showed that the combined weighting information value model achieved the highest accuracy (AUC = 0.872). (4) The model was applied to classify the disaster susceptibility of Xi’an into high (12.31%), medium (18.68%), low (7.88%), and non-susceptible (61.14%) zones. The results are consistent with the actual distribution of disasters, thus providing a scientific basis for disaster prevention. Full article
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26 pages, 3030 KiB  
Article
Predicting Landslide Susceptibility Using Cost Function in Low-Relief Areas: A Case Study of the Urban Municipality of Attecoube (Abidjan, Ivory Coast)
by Frédéric Lorng Gnagne, Serge Schmitz, Hélène Boyossoro Kouadio, Aurélia Hubert-Ferrari, Jean Biémi and Alain Demoulin
Earth 2025, 6(3), 84; https://doi.org/10.3390/earth6030084 - 1 Aug 2025
Viewed by 400
Abstract
Landslides are among the most hazardous natural phenomena affecting Greater Abidjan, causing significant economic and social damage. Strategic planning supported by geographic information systems (GIS) can help mitigate potential losses and enhance disaster resilience. This study evaluates landslide susceptibility using logistic regression and [...] Read more.
Landslides are among the most hazardous natural phenomena affecting Greater Abidjan, causing significant economic and social damage. Strategic planning supported by geographic information systems (GIS) can help mitigate potential losses and enhance disaster resilience. This study evaluates landslide susceptibility using logistic regression and frequency ratio models. The analysis is based on a dataset comprising 54 mapped landslide scarps collected from June 2015 to July 2023, along with 16 thematic predictor variables, including altitude, slope, aspect, profile curvature, plan curvature, drainage area, distance to the drainage network, normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), and an urban-related layer. A high-resolution (5-m) digital elevation model (DEM), derived from multiple data sources, supports the spatial analysis. The landslide inventory was randomly divided into two subsets: 80% for model calibration and 20% for validation. After optimization and statistical testing, the selected thematic layers were integrated to produce a susceptibility map. The results indicate that 6.3% (0.7 km2) of the study area is classified as very highly susceptible. The proportion of the sample (61.2%) in this class had a frequency ratio estimated to be 20.2. Among the predictive indicators, altitude, slope, SE, S, NW, and NDVI were found to have a positive impact on landslide occurrence. Model performance was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), demonstrating strong predictive capability. These findings can support informed land-use planning and risk reduction strategies in urban areas. Furthermore, the prediction model should be communicated to and understood by local authorities to facilitate disaster management. The cost function was adopted as a novel approach to delineate hazardous zones. Considering the landslide inventory period, the increasing hazard due to climate change, and the intensification of human activities, a reasoned choice of sample size was made. This informed decision enabled the production of an updated prediction map. Optimal thresholds were then derived to classify areas into high- and low-susceptibility categories. The prediction map will be useful to planners in helping them make decisions and implement protective measures. Full article
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32 pages, 17155 KiB  
Article
Machine Learning Ensemble Methods for Co-Seismic Landslide Susceptibility: Insights from the 2015 Nepal Earthquake
by Tulasi Ram Bhattarai and Netra Prakash Bhandary
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8477; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158477 - 30 Jul 2025
Viewed by 369
Abstract
The Mw 7.8 Gorkha Earthquake of 25 April 2015 triggered over 25,000 landslides across central Nepal, with 4775 events concentrated in Gorkha District alone. Despite substantial advances in landslide susceptibility mapping, existing studies often overlook the compound role of post-seismic rainfall and lack [...] Read more.
The Mw 7.8 Gorkha Earthquake of 25 April 2015 triggered over 25,000 landslides across central Nepal, with 4775 events concentrated in Gorkha District alone. Despite substantial advances in landslide susceptibility mapping, existing studies often overlook the compound role of post-seismic rainfall and lack robust spatial validation. To address this gap, we validated an ensemble machine learning framework for co-seismic landslide susceptibility modeling by integrating seismic, geomorphological, hydrological, and anthropogenic variables, including cumulative post-seismic rainfall. Using a balanced dataset of 4775 landslide and non-landslide instances, we evaluated the performance of Logistic Regression (LR), Random Forest (RF), and eXtreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) models through spatial cross-validation, SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP) explainability, and ablation analysis. The RF model outperformed all others, achieving an accuracy of 87.9% and a Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) Area Under the Curve (AUC) value of 0.94, while XGBoost closely followed (AUC = 0.93). Ensemble models collectively classified over 95% of observed landslides into High and Very High susceptibility zones, demonstrating strong spatial reliability. SHAP analysis identified elevation, proximity to fault, peak ground acceleration (PGA), slope, and rainfall as dominant predictors. Notably, the inclusion of post-seismic rainfall substantially improved recall and F1 scores in ablation experiments. Spatial cross-validation revealed the superior generalizability of ensemble models under heterogeneous terrain conditions. The findings underscore the value of integrating post-seismic hydrometeorological factors and spatial validation into susceptibility assessments. We recommend adopting ensemble models, particularly RF, for operational hazard mapping in earthquake-prone mountainous regions. Future research should explore the integration of dynamic rainfall thresholds and physics-informed frameworks to enhance early warning systems and climate resilience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Earth Sciences)
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27 pages, 8496 KiB  
Article
Comparative Performance of Machine Learning Models for Landslide Susceptibility Assessment: Impact of Sampling Strategies in Highway Buffer Zone
by Zhenyu Tang, Shumao Qiu, Haoying Xia, Daming Lin and Mingzhou Bai
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(15), 8416; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15158416 - 29 Jul 2025
Viewed by 278
Abstract
Landslide susceptibility assessment is critical for hazard mitigation and land-use planning. This study evaluates the impact of two different non-landslide sampling methods—random sampling and sampling constrained by the Global Landslide Hazard Map (GLHM)—on the performance of various machine learning and deep learning models, [...] Read more.
Landslide susceptibility assessment is critical for hazard mitigation and land-use planning. This study evaluates the impact of two different non-landslide sampling methods—random sampling and sampling constrained by the Global Landslide Hazard Map (GLHM)—on the performance of various machine learning and deep learning models, including Naïve Bayes (NB), Support Vector Machine (SVM), SVM-Random Forest hybrid (SVM-RF), and XGBoost. The study area is a 2 km buffer zone along the Duku Highway in Xinjiang, China, with 102 landslide and 102 non-landslide points extracted by aforementioned sampling methods. Models were tested using ROC curves and non-parametric significance tests based on 20 repetitions of 5-fold spatial cross-validation data. GLHM sampling consistently improved AUROC and accuracy across all models (e.g., AUROC gains: NB +8.44, SVM +7.11, SVM–RF +3.45, XGBoost +3.04; accuracy gains: NB +11.30%, SVM +8.33%, SVM–RF +7.40%, XGBoost +8.31%). XGBoost delivered the best performance under both sampling strategies, reaching 94.61% AUROC and 84.30% accuracy with GLHM sampling. SHAP analysis showed that GLHM sampling stabilized feature importance rankings, highlighting STI, TWI, and NDVI as the main controlling factors for landslides in the study area. These results highlight the importance of hazard-informed sampling to enhance landslide susceptibility modeling accuracy and interpretability. Full article
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26 pages, 13192 KiB  
Article
Investigating a Large-Scale Creeping Landmass Using Remote Sensing and Geophysical Techniques—The Case of Stropones, Evia, Greece
by John D. Alexopoulos, Ioannis-Konstantinos Giannopoulos, Vasileios Gkosios, Spyridon Dilalos, Nicholas Voulgaris and Serafeim E. Poulos
Geosciences 2025, 15(8), 282; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences15080282 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 398
Abstract
The present paper deals with an inhabited, creeping mountainous landmass with profound surface deformation that affects the local community. The scope of the paper is to gather surficial and subsurface information in order to understand the parameters of this creeping mass, which is [...] Read more.
The present paper deals with an inhabited, creeping mountainous landmass with profound surface deformation that affects the local community. The scope of the paper is to gather surficial and subsurface information in order to understand the parameters of this creeping mass, which is usually affected by several parameters, such as its geometry, subsurface water, and shear zone. Therefore, a combined aerial and surface investigation has been conducted. The aerial investigation involves UAV’s LiDAR acquisition for the terrain model and a comparison of historical aerial photographs for land use changes. The multi-technique surface investigation included resistivity (ERT) and seismic (SRT, MASW) measurements and density determination of geological formations. This combination of methods proved to be fruitful since several aspects of the landslide were clarified, such as water flow paths, the internal geological structure of the creeping mass, and its geometrical extent. The depth of the shear zone of the creeping mass is delineated at the first five to ten meters from the surface, especially from the difference in diachronic resistivity change. Full article
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19 pages, 2689 KiB  
Article
A Multi-Temporal Knowledge Graph Framework for Landslide Monitoring and Hazard Assessment
by Runze Wu, Min Huang, Haishan Ma, Jicai Huang, Zhenhua Li, Hongbo Mei and Chengbin Wang
GeoHazards 2025, 6(3), 39; https://doi.org/10.3390/geohazards6030039 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 395
Abstract
In the landslide chain from pre-disaster conditions to landslide mitigation and recovery, time is an important factor in understanding the geological hazards process and managing landsides. Static knowledge graphs are unable to capture the temporal dynamics of landslide events. To address this limitation, [...] Read more.
In the landslide chain from pre-disaster conditions to landslide mitigation and recovery, time is an important factor in understanding the geological hazards process and managing landsides. Static knowledge graphs are unable to capture the temporal dynamics of landslide events. To address this limitation, we propose a systematic framework for constructing a multi-temporal knowledge graph of landslides that integrates multi-source temporal data, enabling the dynamic tracking of landslide processes. Our approach comprises three key steps. First, we summarize domain knowledge and develop a temporal ontology model based on the disaster chain management system. Second, we map heterogeneous datasets (both tabular and textual data) into triples/quadruples and represent them based on the RDF (Resource Description Framework) and quadruple approaches. Finally, we validate the utility of multi-temporal knowledge graphs through multidimensional queries and develop a web interface that allows users to input landslide names to retrieve location and time-axis information. A case study of the Zhangjiawan landslide in the Three Gorges Reservoir Area demonstrates the multi-temporal knowledge graph’s capability to track temporal updates effectively. The query results show that multi-temporal knowledge graphs effectively support multi-temporal queries. This study advances landslide research by combining static knowledge representation with the dynamic evolution of landslides, laying the foundation for hazard forecasting and intelligent early-warning systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Landslide Research: State of the Art and Innovations)
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35 pages, 12716 KiB  
Article
Bridging the Gap Between Active Faulting and Deformation Across Normal-Fault Systems in the Central–Southern Apennines (Italy): Multi-Scale and Multi-Source Data Analysis
by Marco Battistelli, Federica Ferrarini, Francesco Bucci, Michele Santangelo, Mauro Cardinali, John P. Merryman Boncori, Daniele Cirillo, Michele M. C. Carafa and Francesco Brozzetti
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(14), 2491; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17142491 - 17 Jul 2025
Viewed by 522
Abstract
We inspected a sector of the Apennines (central–southern Italy) in geographic and structural continuity with the Quaternary-active extensional belt but where clear geomorphic and seismological signatures of normal faulting are unexpectedly missing. The evidence of active tectonics in this area, between Abruzzo and [...] Read more.
We inspected a sector of the Apennines (central–southern Italy) in geographic and structural continuity with the Quaternary-active extensional belt but where clear geomorphic and seismological signatures of normal faulting are unexpectedly missing. The evidence of active tectonics in this area, between Abruzzo and Molise, does not align with geodetic deformation data and the seismotectonic setting of the central Apennines. To investigate the apparent disconnection between active deformation and the absence of surface faulting in a sector where high lithologic erodibility and landslide susceptibility may hide its structural evidence, we combined multi-scale and multi-source data analyses encompassing morphometric analysis and remote sensing techniques. We utilised high-resolution topographic data to analyse the topographic pattern and investigate potential imbalances between tectonics and erosion. Additionally, we employed aerial-photo interpretation to examine the spatial distribution of morphological features and slope instabilities which are often linked to active faulting. To discern potential biases arising from non-tectonic (slope-related) signals, we analysed InSAR data in key sectors across the study area, including carbonate ridges and foredeep-derived Molise Units for comparison. The topographic analysis highlighted topographic disequilibrium conditions across the study area, and aerial-image interpretation revealed morphologic features offset by structural lineaments. The interferometric analysis confirmed a significant role of gravitational movements in denudating some fault planes while highlighting a clustered spatial pattern of hillslope instabilities. In this context, these instabilities can be considered a proxy for the control exerted by tectonic structures. All findings converge on the identification of an ~20 km long corridor, the Castel di Sangro–Rionero Sannitico alignment (CaS-RS), which exhibits varied evidence of deformation attributable to active normal faulting. The latter manifests through subtle and diffuse deformation controlled by a thick tectonic nappe made up of poorly cohesive lithologies. Overall, our findings suggest that the CaS-RS bridges the structural gap between the Mt Porrara–Mt Pizzalto–Mt Rotella and North Matese fault systems, potentially accounting for some of the deformation recorded in the sector. Our approach contributes to bridging the information gap in this complex sector of the Apennines, offering original insights for future investigations and seismic hazard assessment in the region. Full article
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33 pages, 39261 KiB  
Article
Assessing Geohazards on Lefkas Island, Greece: GIS-Based Analysis and Public Dissemination Through a GIS Web Application
by Eleni Katapodi and Varvara Antoniou
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(14), 7935; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15147935 - 16 Jul 2025
Viewed by 576
Abstract
This research paper presents an assessment of geohazards on Lefkas Island, Greece, using Geographic Information System (GIS) technology to map risk and enhance public awareness through an interactive web application. Natural hazards such as landslides, floods, wildfires, and desertification threaten both the safety [...] Read more.
This research paper presents an assessment of geohazards on Lefkas Island, Greece, using Geographic Information System (GIS) technology to map risk and enhance public awareness through an interactive web application. Natural hazards such as landslides, floods, wildfires, and desertification threaten both the safety of residents and the island’s tourism-dependent economy, particularly due to its seismic activity and Mediterranean climate. By combining the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction with GIS capabilities, we created detailed hazard maps that visually represent areas of susceptibility and provide critical insights for local authorities and the public. The web application developed serves as a user-friendly platform for disseminating hazard information and educational resources, thus promoting community preparedness and resilience. The findings highlight the necessity for proactive land management strategies and community engagement in disaster risk reduction efforts. This study underscores GIS’s pivotal role in fostering informed decision making and enhancing the safety of Lefkas Island’s inhabitants and visitors in the face of environmental challenges. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging GIS Technologies and Their Applications)
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27 pages, 6169 KiB  
Article
Application of Semi-Supervised Clustering with Membership Information and Deep Learning in Landslide Susceptibility Assessment
by Hua Xia, Zili Qin, Yuanxin Tong, Yintian Li, Rui Zhang and Hongxia Luo
Land 2025, 14(7), 1472; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14071472 - 15 Jul 2025
Viewed by 300
Abstract
Landslide susceptibility assessment (LSA) plays a crucial role in disaster prevention and mitigation. Traditional random selection of non-landslide samples (labeled as 0) suffers from poor representativeness and high randomness, which may include potential landslide areas and affect the accuracy of LSA. To address [...] Read more.
Landslide susceptibility assessment (LSA) plays a crucial role in disaster prevention and mitigation. Traditional random selection of non-landslide samples (labeled as 0) suffers from poor representativeness and high randomness, which may include potential landslide areas and affect the accuracy of LSA. To address this issue, this study proposes a novel Landslide Susceptibility Index–based Semi-supervised Fuzzy C-Means (LSI-SFCM) sampling strategy combining membership degrees. It utilizes landslide and unlabeled samples to map landslide membership degree via Semi-supervised Fuzzy C-Means (SFCM). Non-landslide samples are selected from low-membership regions and assigned membership values as labels. This study developed three models for LSA—Convolutional Neural Network (CNN), U-Net, and Support Vector Machine (SVM), and compared three negative sample sampling strategies: Random Sampling (RS), SFCM (samples labeled 0), and LSI-SFCM. The results demonstrate that the LSI-SFCM effectively enhances the representativeness and diversity of negative samples, improving the predictive performance and classification reliability. Deep learning models using LSI-SFCM performed with superior predictive capability. The CNN model achieved an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 95.52% and a prediction rate curve value of 0.859. Furthermore, compared with the traditional unsupervised fuzzy C-means (FCM) clustering, SFCM produced a more reasonable distribution of landslide membership degrees, better reflecting the distinction between landslides and non-landslides. This approach enhances the reliability of LSA and provides a scientific basis for disaster prevention and mitigation authorities. Full article
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