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1.
MethodsX ; 10: 102064, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36845364

RESUMO

The area fraction of specific kinds of information in a catchment provides parameters to be utilized in catchment-scale analyses. For example, the area fraction of soil movement caused by landslides is an indicator for the estimation of the magnitude of landslides. However, catchment-scale analyses often require applying the same processing to higher numbers of study catchments, making it a time-consuming process. Here an ArcGIS-based method has been presented to reduce cumbersome procedures for the calculation of the area fraction of several target surface data. The method applies automated and iterative processing to multiple catchments, whose location and scale are defined by users. This method may prove to be useful for calculating the area fraction of parameters other than landslide area (e.g., specific land use or lithology) within a framework of catchment-scale analysis.•An Arcgis-based method to calculate the area fraction of landslide area in catchments.•Manual work is reduced by automated and iterative processing based on ModelBuilder.•It can be used to get the area fraction of several surface information in catchments.

2.
Environ Pollut ; 318: 120917, 2023 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36563985

RESUMO

A qualitative assessment of groundwater resources is significant in islands that largely depend on individual aquifers. In Okinawa Island, Japan, limestone aquifers are valuable groundwater reservoirs. However, these aquifers are sensitive to contamination due to high permeability in the conduit network. Although human activity has increased in recent decades, there remains insufficient hydrological information to assess the impact of anthropogenic loading on groundwater quality in Okinawa Island. To address this, we analyzed 4 seepage, 16 river, and 14 shallow (<10 m in depth) groundwater samples to obtain baseline chemistry and anthropogenic impact information on groundwater resources in central Nago City, northern Okinawa Island. We divided the region into three landscape units: lowland (<30 m asl), eastern, and western areas. Except for a limited number of water samples collected in the eastern mountain and coastal section of the lowland, the hydrochemistry was characterized by Ca-HCO3 type, indicating carbonate weathering within limestone-bearing lithology and Quaternary deposits. Divergent water 87Sr/86Sr values (0.707723-0.712102) with lower Sr concentrations (0.1-1.6 µmol/L) in the mountains and convergent values (0.708859-0.709184) with higher Sr concentrations (0.3-17.6 µmol/L) in the lowland suggest that the water-rock interactions in the lowland aquifer composed of Quaternary deposits are mostly responsible for the hydrochemistry of groundwater resources. The local meteoric water line (δD = 6.38 δ18O + 3.36) indicated that the water originates from precipitation, the altitude effect, and evaporation. The δ15N and δ18O in NO3- indicated the addition of manure and septic waste in the lowland aquifer. The results imply that detecting source areas of anthropogenic NO3- prior to serious groundwater pollution is important (regardless of the NO3- concentration), and isotope analyses would aid in developing appropriate action plans to mitigate or prevent future water pollution by NO3- in island regions.


Assuntos
Água Subterrânea , Poluentes Químicos da Água , Humanos , Monitoramento Ambiental/métodos , Efeitos Antropogênicos , Japão , Poluentes Químicos da Água/análise , Água Subterrânea/química , Água/análise
3.
Sci Total Environ ; 825: 153970, 2022 Jun 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35183625

RESUMO

Catchment water quality plays an important role in ecosystem and water resource management in mountainous areas. Shallow landslides triggered by earthquakes or heavy rainfall can cause a sudden and long-term deterioration in stream water quality by releasing contaminants into streams. Although many studies have been undertaken on the relationship between a single landslide and the water chemistry of a nearby river, little is known about the impact of densely distributed shallow landslides on stream water chemistry at the catchment scale. To this end, this study determined the major ion concentrations and isotopic compositions of stream water along with the shallow landslide area/catchment area ratio (LCR) in 37 headwater subcatchments in the southern part of Hokkaido, Japan, where an earthquake caused more than 6000 shallow landslides on September 6, 2018. In subcatchments with a high LCR, stream water exhibited significantly higher Ca2+ and HCO3- concentrations, while there was no correlation between the LCR and concentrations of Na+ and Cl-. The δ18O and δD values of stream water plotted between the local meteoric water lines of summer and winter precipitation, indicating that they originated from meteoric water. Shallow landslides formed sliding surfaces, landslide deposits, and landslide-dammed lakes, which enhanced the interaction between the surface soil and stream water, leading to Ca-HCO3 type water. The results showed that shallow-landslide-driven changes in stream water quality could be linearly approximated by the fraction of the landslide area at the catchment scale, which is a more versatile approach than the local framework of a single landslide and a nearby stream. In future research, these findings could be combined with a slope stability model and the background climatic, geological, topographical, and water quality conditions of a watershed to evaluate water pollution triggered by shallow landslides at the catchment scale.


Assuntos
Terremotos , Deslizamentos de Terra , Ecossistema , Lagos , Rios
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