Articles | Volume 19, issue 4
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-19-837-2019
https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-19-837-2019
Research article
 | 
17 Apr 2019
Research article |  | 17 Apr 2019

Simple rules to minimise exposure to coseismic landslide hazard

David G. Milledge, Alexander L. Densmore, Dino Bellugi, Nick J. Rosser, Jack Watt, Gen Li, and Katie J. Oven

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Cited articles

Alexander, D.: Vulnerability to landslides, in: Landslide Hazard and Risk, Wiley, Chichester, 175–198, 2005. 
Atwater, B. F., Cisternas, M. V., Bourgeois, J., Dudley, W. C., Hendley, J. W., and Stauffer, P. H.: Surviving a tsunami – lessons from Chile, Hawaii, and Japan, No. 1187, Geological Survey (USGS), 1999. 
Avouac, J. P., Meng, L., Wei, S., Wang, T., and Ampuero, J. P.: Lower edge of locked Main Himalayan Thrust unzipped by the 2015 Gorkha earthquake, Nat. Geosci., 8, 708–711, 2015. 
Bellugi, D., Dietrich, W. E., Stock, J., McKean, J., Kazian, B., and Hargrove, P.: Spatially explicit shallow landslide susceptibility mapping over large areas, Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Debris-Flow Hazards Mitigation: Mechanics, prediction and assessment, Italian Journal of Engineering Geology and Environment, 759–768, doi:10.4408/IJEGE.2011-03.B-045, 2011. 
Benda, L. E. and Cundy, T. W.: Predicting deposition of debris flows in mountain channels, Can. Geotech. J., 27, 409–417, 1990. 
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Short summary
Mitigating landslide risk requires information on landslide hazards on a suitable scale to inform decisions. We develop simple rules to identify landslide hazards and the probability of being hit by a landslide, then test their performance using six existing landslide inventories from recent earthquakes. We find that the best rules are "minimize your maximum look angle to the skyline" and "avoid steep (> 10˚) channels with many steep (> 40˚) areas that are upslope".
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