Inferring subsidence characteristics in Wuhan (China) through multitemporal InSAR and hydrogeological analysis

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Jiyuan Hu
  • Mahdi Motagh
  • Jiming Guo
  • Mahmud Haghshenas Haghighi
  • Tao Li
  • Fen Qin
  • Wenhao Wu

Externe Organisationen

  • Henan Universität
  • Helmholtz-Zentrum Potsdam Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum (GFZ)
  • Wuhan University
  • Hunan University of Science and Technology
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Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer106530
FachzeitschriftEngineering geology
Jahrgang297
Frühes Online-Datum13 Jan. 2022
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Feb. 2022

Abstract

Wuhan (China) is facing severe consolidation subsidence of soft soil and karst collapse hazards. To quantitatively explore the extent and causes of land subsidence in Wuhan, we performed multitemporal interferometry (MTI) analysis using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from the TerraSAR-X satellite from 2013 to 2017 and the Sentinel-1A satellite from 2015 to 2017. MTI results reveal four major subsidence zones in Wuhan, namely, Hankou (exceeding −6 cm/yr), Xudong-Qingshan (−3 cm/yr), Baishazhou-Jiangdi (−3 cm/yr), and Jianshe-Yangluo (−2 cm/yr). Accuracy assessment using 106 levelling benchmarks and cross-validation between the two InSAR-based results indicate an overall root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 2.5 and 3.1 mm/yr, respectively. Geophysical and geological analyses suggest that among the four major subsiding zones, Hankou, Xudong-Qingshan, and Jianshe-Yangluo are located in non-karstic soft soil areas, where shallow groundwater (< 30 m) declines driven by engineering dewatering and industrial water depletion contribute directly to soft soil compaction. Subsidence in the Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone develops in the karst terrain with abundant underground caves and fissures, which are major natural factors for gradual subsidence and karst collapse. Spatial variation analysis of the geological conditions indicates that the stage of karst development plays the most important role in influencing kart subsidence, followed by municipal construction, proximity to major rivers, and overlying soil structure. Moreover, land subsidence in this zone is affected more via coupling effects from multiple factors. Risk zoning analysis integrating subsidence horizontal gradient, InSAR deformation rates, and municipal construction density show that the high-risk areas in Wuhan are mainly distributed in the Tianxingzhou and Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone, and generally spread along the metro lines.

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Inferring subsidence characteristics in Wuhan (China) through multitemporal InSAR and hydrogeological analysis. / Hu, Jiyuan; Motagh, Mahdi; Guo, Jiming et al.
in: Engineering geology, Jahrgang 297, 106530, 02.2022.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Hu J, Motagh M, Guo J, Haghighi MH, Li T, Qin F et al. Inferring subsidence characteristics in Wuhan (China) through multitemporal InSAR and hydrogeological analysis. Engineering geology. 2022 Feb;297:106530. Epub 2022 Jan 13. doi: 10.1016/j.enggeo.2022.106530, https://doi.org/10.15488/12953
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@article{1b638bc6ad60423296fb9d7ef00cd8e5,
title = "Inferring subsidence characteristics in Wuhan (China) through multitemporal InSAR and hydrogeological analysis",
abstract = "Wuhan (China) is facing severe consolidation subsidence of soft soil and karst collapse hazards. To quantitatively explore the extent and causes of land subsidence in Wuhan, we performed multitemporal interferometry (MTI) analysis using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from the TerraSAR-X satellite from 2013 to 2017 and the Sentinel-1A satellite from 2015 to 2017. MTI results reveal four major subsidence zones in Wuhan, namely, Hankou (exceeding −6 cm/yr), Xudong-Qingshan (−3 cm/yr), Baishazhou-Jiangdi (−3 cm/yr), and Jianshe-Yangluo (−2 cm/yr). Accuracy assessment using 106 levelling benchmarks and cross-validation between the two InSAR-based results indicate an overall root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 2.5 and 3.1 mm/yr, respectively. Geophysical and geological analyses suggest that among the four major subsiding zones, Hankou, Xudong-Qingshan, and Jianshe-Yangluo are located in non-karstic soft soil areas, where shallow groundwater (< 30 m) declines driven by engineering dewatering and industrial water depletion contribute directly to soft soil compaction. Subsidence in the Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone develops in the karst terrain with abundant underground caves and fissures, which are major natural factors for gradual subsidence and karst collapse. Spatial variation analysis of the geological conditions indicates that the stage of karst development plays the most important role in influencing kart subsidence, followed by municipal construction, proximity to major rivers, and overlying soil structure. Moreover, land subsidence in this zone is affected more via coupling effects from multiple factors. Risk zoning analysis integrating subsidence horizontal gradient, InSAR deformation rates, and municipal construction density show that the high-risk areas in Wuhan are mainly distributed in the Tianxingzhou and Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone, and generally spread along the metro lines.",
keywords = "Consolidation subsidence, Karst collapse, Multitemporal InSAR, Wuhan",
author = "Jiyuan Hu and Mahdi Motagh and Jiming Guo and Haghighi, {Mahmud Haghshenas} and Tao Li and Fen Qin and Wenhao Wu",
note = "Funding Information: This work was sponsored by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 42174037 ), Henan Provincial Key R&D and Promotion Special Project (Sci-ence and Technology Research) (No. 212102310414 ). The TerraSAR-X data were provided by DLR under proposal number GEO1916, and the Copernicus Sentinel data were provided by ESA. We would like to thank Hubei Geological Environmental Center for providing abundant geological dataset and karst survey reports. We are especially grateful to Janusz Wasowski and the anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments, which greatly improved the quality of this manuscript. ",
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doi = "10.1016/j.enggeo.2022.106530",
language = "English",
volume = "297",
journal = "Engineering geology",
issn = "0013-7952",
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Download

TY - JOUR

T1 - Inferring subsidence characteristics in Wuhan (China) through multitemporal InSAR and hydrogeological analysis

AU - Hu, Jiyuan

AU - Motagh, Mahdi

AU - Guo, Jiming

AU - Haghighi, Mahmud Haghshenas

AU - Li, Tao

AU - Qin, Fen

AU - Wu, Wenhao

N1 - Funding Information: This work was sponsored by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 42174037 ), Henan Provincial Key R&D and Promotion Special Project (Sci-ence and Technology Research) (No. 212102310414 ). The TerraSAR-X data were provided by DLR under proposal number GEO1916, and the Copernicus Sentinel data were provided by ESA. We would like to thank Hubei Geological Environmental Center for providing abundant geological dataset and karst survey reports. We are especially grateful to Janusz Wasowski and the anonymous reviewers for their valuable comments, which greatly improved the quality of this manuscript.

PY - 2022/2

Y1 - 2022/2

N2 - Wuhan (China) is facing severe consolidation subsidence of soft soil and karst collapse hazards. To quantitatively explore the extent and causes of land subsidence in Wuhan, we performed multitemporal interferometry (MTI) analysis using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from the TerraSAR-X satellite from 2013 to 2017 and the Sentinel-1A satellite from 2015 to 2017. MTI results reveal four major subsidence zones in Wuhan, namely, Hankou (exceeding −6 cm/yr), Xudong-Qingshan (−3 cm/yr), Baishazhou-Jiangdi (−3 cm/yr), and Jianshe-Yangluo (−2 cm/yr). Accuracy assessment using 106 levelling benchmarks and cross-validation between the two InSAR-based results indicate an overall root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 2.5 and 3.1 mm/yr, respectively. Geophysical and geological analyses suggest that among the four major subsiding zones, Hankou, Xudong-Qingshan, and Jianshe-Yangluo are located in non-karstic soft soil areas, where shallow groundwater (< 30 m) declines driven by engineering dewatering and industrial water depletion contribute directly to soft soil compaction. Subsidence in the Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone develops in the karst terrain with abundant underground caves and fissures, which are major natural factors for gradual subsidence and karst collapse. Spatial variation analysis of the geological conditions indicates that the stage of karst development plays the most important role in influencing kart subsidence, followed by municipal construction, proximity to major rivers, and overlying soil structure. Moreover, land subsidence in this zone is affected more via coupling effects from multiple factors. Risk zoning analysis integrating subsidence horizontal gradient, InSAR deformation rates, and municipal construction density show that the high-risk areas in Wuhan are mainly distributed in the Tianxingzhou and Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone, and generally spread along the metro lines.

AB - Wuhan (China) is facing severe consolidation subsidence of soft soil and karst collapse hazards. To quantitatively explore the extent and causes of land subsidence in Wuhan, we performed multitemporal interferometry (MTI) analysis using synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data from the TerraSAR-X satellite from 2013 to 2017 and the Sentinel-1A satellite from 2015 to 2017. MTI results reveal four major subsidence zones in Wuhan, namely, Hankou (exceeding −6 cm/yr), Xudong-Qingshan (−3 cm/yr), Baishazhou-Jiangdi (−3 cm/yr), and Jianshe-Yangluo (−2 cm/yr). Accuracy assessment using 106 levelling benchmarks and cross-validation between the two InSAR-based results indicate an overall root-mean-square error (RMSE) of 2.5 and 3.1 mm/yr, respectively. Geophysical and geological analyses suggest that among the four major subsiding zones, Hankou, Xudong-Qingshan, and Jianshe-Yangluo are located in non-karstic soft soil areas, where shallow groundwater (< 30 m) declines driven by engineering dewatering and industrial water depletion contribute directly to soft soil compaction. Subsidence in the Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone develops in the karst terrain with abundant underground caves and fissures, which are major natural factors for gradual subsidence and karst collapse. Spatial variation analysis of the geological conditions indicates that the stage of karst development plays the most important role in influencing kart subsidence, followed by municipal construction, proximity to major rivers, and overlying soil structure. Moreover, land subsidence in this zone is affected more via coupling effects from multiple factors. Risk zoning analysis integrating subsidence horizontal gradient, InSAR deformation rates, and municipal construction density show that the high-risk areas in Wuhan are mainly distributed in the Tianxingzhou and Baishazhou-Jiangdi zone, and generally spread along the metro lines.

KW - Consolidation subsidence

KW - Karst collapse

KW - Multitemporal InSAR

KW - Wuhan

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U2 - 10.1016/j.enggeo.2022.106530

DO - 10.1016/j.enggeo.2022.106530

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85123028887

VL - 297

JO - Engineering geology

JF - Engineering geology

SN - 0013-7952

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