María Camila Herrera-Coy’s research while affiliated with University of Jaén and other places

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Publications (1)


Location and geology of study area: (a) Location of Cundinamarca and Meta Departments in Colombia (own elaboration on AutoNavi Base Maps); (b) Colombian Andes and Eastern Cordillera (own elaboration on Esri Physical Map); (c): Study area and main populations (own elaboration on Google Satellite); (d) Geological setting adapted from the Geological Map of Colombia [64]. Coordinates are in WGS84 (lat/long at left and top margins) and in WGS84-UTM 18 (projected, in right and down margins).
Flowchart followed in this study.
Factor maps considered in the study area; (a): Elevation; (b): Slope; (c): Aspect; (d): Curvature; (e): TPI; (f): TRI; (g): Lithology; (h): Precipitation; (i): Land Cover; (j): NDVI; (k): Distance to roads; (l): Distance to rivers.
LSM methods: (a) Matrix; (b) Linear discriminant analysis; (c) Random forest; (d) Artificial neural network.
Landslide inventory in the study area. Five landslide typologies are distinguished.

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Landslide Susceptibility Analysis on the Vicinity of Bogotá-Villavicencio Road (Eastern Cordillera of the Colombian Andes)
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2023

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301 Reads

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4 Citations

María Camila Herrera-Coy

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Landslide occurrence in Colombia is very frequent due to its geographical location in the Andean mountain range, with a very pronounced orography, a significant geological complexity and an outstanding climatic variability. More specifically, the study area around the Bogotá-Villavicencio road in the central sector of the Eastern Cordillera is one of the regions with the highest concentration of phenomena, which makes its study a priority. An inventory and detailed analysis of 2506 landslides has been carried out, in which five basic typologies have been differentiated: avalanches, debris flows, slides, earth flows and creeping areas. Debris avalanches and debris flows occur mainly in metamorphic materials (phyllites, schists and quartz-sandstones), areas with sparse vegetation, steep slopes and lower sections of hillslopes; meanwhile, slides, earth flows and creep occur in Cretaceous lutites, crop/grass lands, medium and low slopes and lower-middle sections of the hillslopes. Based on this analysis, landslide susceptibility models have been made for the different typologies and with different methods (matrix, discriminant analysis, random forest and neural networks) and input factors. The results are generally quite good, with average AUC-ROC values above 0.7–0.8, and the machine learning methods are the most appropriate, especially random forest, with a selected number of factors (between 6 and 8). The degree of fit (DF) usually shows relative errors lower than 5% and success higher than 90%. Finally, an integrated landslide susceptibility map (LSM) has been made for shallower and deeper types of movements. All the LSM show a clear zonation as a consequence of the geological control of the susceptibility.

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Citations (1)


... However, informal occupation in hazard-prone areas, vulnerable to landslides exacerbated by previous mining, ensued [48]. Morphodynamically, AE's unstable zone encompassed two distinct landslide sectors: 'El Espino' to the north and 'La Carbonera' to the south, covering an approximate area of 110 ha ( Figure 1) [49]. ...

Reference:

Challenges for Sustainable Urban Planning: A Spatiotemporal Analysis of Complex Landslide Risk in a Latin American Megacity
Landslide Susceptibility Analysis on the Vicinity of Bogotá-Villavicencio Road (Eastern Cordillera of the Colombian Andes)