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dc.contributor.authorKORUP, Oliver
dc.contributor.authorGorum, TOLGA
dc.contributor.authorHAYAKAWA, Yuichi
dc.date.accessioned2021-03-04T17:23:44Z
dc.date.available2021-03-04T17:23:44Z
dc.date.issued2012
dc.identifier.citationKORUP O., Gorum T., HAYAKAWA Y., "Without power? Landslide inventories in the face of climate change", EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, cilt.37, sa.1, ss.92-99, 2012
dc.identifier.issn0197-9337
dc.identifier.otherav_85e11669-5ab6-42b3-b10d-f8437bfc26c3
dc.identifier.othervv_1032021
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12627/91009
dc.identifier.urihttps://doi.org/10.1002/esp.2248
dc.description.abstractProjected scenarios of climate change involve general predictions about the likely changes to the magnitude and frequency of landslides, particularly as a consequence of altered precipitation and temperature regimes. Whether such landslide response to contemporary or past climate change may be captured in differing scaling statistics of landslide size distributions and the erosion rates derived thereof remains debated. We test this notion with simple Monte Carlo and bootstrap simulations of statistical models commonly used to characterize empirical landslide size distributions. Our results show that significant changes to total volumes contained in such inventories may be masked by statistically indistinguishable scaling parameters, critically depending on, among others, the size of the largest of landslides recorded. Conversely, comparable model parameter values may obscure significant, i.e. more than twofold, changes to landslide occurrence, and thus inferred rates of hillslope denudation and sediment delivery to drainage networks. A time series of some of Earth's largest mass movements reveals clustering near and partly before the last glacial-interglacial transition and a distinct step-over from white noise to temporal clustering around this period. However, elucidating whether this is a distinct signal of first-order climate-change impact on slope stability or simply coincides with a transition from short-term statistical noise to long-term steady-state conditions remains an important research challenge. Copyright (C) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
dc.language.isoeng
dc.subjectJeoloji Mühendisliği
dc.subjectMühendislik ve Teknoloji
dc.subjectSosyal ve Beşeri Bilimler
dc.subjectFiziki Coğrafya
dc.subjectCoğrafya
dc.subjectJEOLOJİ
dc.subjectYER BİLİMİ, MULTİDİSİPLİNER
dc.subjectTemel Bilimler (SCI)
dc.subjectYerbilimleri
dc.subjectCOĞRAFYA, FİZİKSEL
dc.titleWithout power? Landslide inventories in the face of climate change
dc.typeMakale
dc.relation.journalEARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
dc.contributor.departmentUniversity of Potsdam , ,
dc.identifier.volume37
dc.identifier.issue1
dc.identifier.startpage92
dc.identifier.endpage99
dc.contributor.firstauthorID100783


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