Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4721156 Physics and Chemistry of the Earth, Parts A/B/C 2012 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

Morphological and landscape features (broad, beautiful sandy beaches close to high and impressive mountains) make the Versilia area one of the most important tourist areas in Italy, located in north-western Tuscany and facing the Ligurian Sea. Nevertheless, this particular geographic configuration contributes to a high frequency of intense meteorological phenomena.This paper presents the most significant results of an investigation into historical events (floods and landslides) occurring in the last centuries in the Versilia River basin. The main purpose is to contribute to hydrogeological hazard assessment in the Apuan area as well as to collect useful data in order to make a catalog of disastrous events.The research confirms the vulnerability of the territory being studied (186 damaging events from 1328 to 2009), which was emphasized by the tragic hydrogeological catastrophe of June 19, 1996 (13 fatalities). High severity events can also be identified in 1636, 1774, 1846, 1885 and 1902, together with many less intense events, which nonetheless had significant consequences.The damaging events show both a tendency to recur in the same areas, as well as a significant rise in frequency during the last centuries. These, in turn, probably depend on concurring factors: increased number and reliability of information sources; increased attention to the damaging phenomena; expansion of the elements at risk; possible climate changes. In the Versilia River basin, the average frequency is 1 damaging event every 3.7 years. An event similar to June 1996 should have a recurrence time of about 110 years. Moreover, the data forms the basis for a preliminary, but significant, classification of these identified events. This classification is based on event severity, deduced or estimated from the information gathered.

► Historical research as a tool in assessing landslide and flood hazard in small areas. ► 186 damaging events found in the 1328–2009 period in the Versilia River basin. ► Event frequency and damage increasing in time, clear increase in the last 200 years. ► Event classification into four classes (low, middle, high and very high intensity). ► Possible link between frequency and climate change (increasing temperature).

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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