Terrestrial laser scanning for monitoring the process of hard rock coastal cliff erosion

被引:280
作者
Rosser, NJ [1 ]
Petley, DN [1 ]
Lim, M [1 ]
Dunning, SA [1 ]
Allison, RJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Durham, Dept Geog, Sci Labs, Durham DH1 3LE, England
关键词
erosion; monitoring; remote sensing; slope stability;
D O I
10.1144/1470-9236/05-008
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
Hard rock cliffs represent approximately 75% of the world's coastline. The rate and nature of the mechanisms that govern the retreat of these cliffs remain poorly constrained, primarily because conventional approaches employed to monitor these processes are generally inadequate for describing cliff erosion processes directly. These techniques are usually centred upon the interpretation of data collected periodically from aerial sensors, including stereographic aerial photographs and more recently airborne LIDAR. These methods are generally not capable of assessing the pattern of erosion on the cliff face due to the oblique viewing angles, and hence tend to concentrate upon the resultant recession of the cliff top rather than change on the cliff face. Thus, processes of undercutting and small scale iterative failures of localized sections of the cliff face are generally not recorded. It is only when a failure affects the cliff top that any retreat is recorded. It is therefore unsurprising that cliff erosion is commonly deemed to be episodic. This paper presents a new approach to detailed cliff process monitoring using terrestrial laser scanning (TLS), which directly monitors changes on coastal cliff faces. The method allows the quantification of failures ranging in scale from the detachment of blocks of a few centimetres in dimension through to large rock, debris or soil, falls, slides and flows over 1000 m(3). The collection of data is on-site and rapid and hence cost effective, providing a detailed description of the nature of coastal cliff erosion. This paper describes the methodological approach and demonstrates the range of results which can be generated, here shown for 16 months of monitoring collected for a near-vertical cliff section on the coast North Yorkshire, UK. The results demonstrate that trial laser scanning can be used to quantify cliff failures a previously unobtainable precision. The results reveal strong spatial and temporal pattern of cliff collapse contradicts commonly held perceptions of the nature coastal cliff development.
引用
收藏
页码:363 / 375
页数:13
相关论文
共 22 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], THESIS U LEEDS UK
[2]  
[Anonymous], GIM INT
[3]   Laser-ranging scanning system to observe topographical deformations of volcanoes [J].
Aoki, T ;
Takabe, M ;
Mizutani, K ;
Itabe, T .
APPLIED OPTICS, 1997, 36 (06) :1239-1244
[4]  
Bird ECF., 2000, Coastal geomorphology: an Introduction
[5]   STEADY-STATE BEHAVIOR OF THE BLACK-VEN MUDSLIDE - THE APPLICATION OF ARCHIVAL ANALYTICAL PHOTOGRAMMETRY TO STUDIES OF LANDFORM CHANGE [J].
CHANDLER, JH ;
BRUNSDEN, D .
EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 1995, 20 (03) :255-275
[6]  
Cox B.M., 1999, A Formational Framework for the Lower Jurassic of England and Wales (Onshore Area)
[7]  
CROWELL M, 1991, J COASTAL RES, P723
[8]  
*DEFRA, 2001, NATL APPR ASS RISK F
[9]   Application of a new in situ 3D laser scanner to study the scale effect on the rock joint surface roughness [J].
Fardin, N ;
Feng, Q ;
Stephansson, O .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ROCK MECHANICS AND MINING SCIENCES, 2004, 41 (02) :329-335
[10]  
HEEPS C., 1985, Z GEOMORPHOL, V57, P81