TY - JOUR
T1 - Landslides along the jordanian dead sea coast triggered by the lake level lowering
AU - Closson, D.
AU - Karaki, N. Abou
AU - Hallot, F.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - The level of the Dead Sea lowers 1 m/year and this rate is in acceleration. The decline is causing one of the major environmental disasters of the twenty-first century. The freshwater resources management policy of Israel, Jordan, and Palestine controls the phenomenon. Since the 1960s, the level of this terminal lake dropped by 28 m and its surface shrunk by one-third. In the 1990s, international builders created major tourist resorts and industrial plants along the Jordanian shore while, during the same period, geological hazards triggered by the level lowering spread out. From the very beginning of the year 2000, sinkholes, subsidence, landslides, and river erosion damaged infra- structures more and more frequently: dikes, bridges, roads, houses, factories, pipes, crops, etc. Until present, scientific articles about this ongoing disaster concerned only sink- holes and subsidence phenomena. This paper focuses on the landslides issue along the Jordanian coast. Based on a set of ground observations collected since 1999, the dynamics of the triggering factors in relation to the evolution of the hydro-geological setting is discussed. It is inferred that the recent industrial and tourist infrastructures never took into consideration the very important geotech-nical constraints resulting from the Dead Sea lowering.
AB - The level of the Dead Sea lowers 1 m/year and this rate is in acceleration. The decline is causing one of the major environmental disasters of the twenty-first century. The freshwater resources management policy of Israel, Jordan, and Palestine controls the phenomenon. Since the 1960s, the level of this terminal lake dropped by 28 m and its surface shrunk by one-third. In the 1990s, international builders created major tourist resorts and industrial plants along the Jordanian shore while, during the same period, geological hazards triggered by the level lowering spread out. From the very beginning of the year 2000, sinkholes, subsidence, landslides, and river erosion damaged infra- structures more and more frequently: dikes, bridges, roads, houses, factories, pipes, crops, etc. Until present, scientific articles about this ongoing disaster concerned only sink- holes and subsidence phenomena. This paper focuses on the landslides issue along the Jordanian coast. Based on a set of ground observations collected since 1999, the dynamics of the triggering factors in relation to the evolution of the hydro-geological setting is discussed. It is inferred that the recent industrial and tourist infrastructures never took into consideration the very important geotech-nical constraints resulting from the Dead Sea lowering.
KW - Coastal hazards
KW - Dam geology
KW - Landslides
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77955151539&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s12665-009-0128-z
DO - 10.1007/s12665-009-0128-z
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:77955151539
SN - 1866-6280
VL - 59
SP - 14170
EP - 11430
JO - Environmental Earth Sciences
JF - Environmental Earth Sciences
IS - 7
ER -