Vulnerability of Venice's coastland to relative sea-level rise

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Abstract

Relative sea-level rise (RSLR), i.e. sea-level rise due to climate changes combined with land subsidence, is one of the processes that is most severely threatening the coastal systems around the world. The Venice coastland forms the major low-lying area in Italy and encompasses a variety of environments, such as farmlands, estuaries, deltas, lagoons and urbanized areas. Valuable ecosystems, historical heritages and economic activities are located in this area. Since most of the territory lies at a ground elevation below or slightly above the mean sea-level, also a few mmyr-1 of land subsidence can seriously impacts on the Venice coastal system. In this study, we present an analysis of the vulnerability to RSLR considering an uneven land subsidence distribution, with an application on the Venice coastland. The analysis is delineated at the regional scale by an index-based model and a proper coupling of various thematic layers, such as high spatial resolution land subsidence data retrieved by satellite SAR interferometry, ongoing and projected sea-level rise trends, and morpho-physiographic setting of the coastland.

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APA

Tosi, L., Da Lio, C., Donnici, S., Strozzi, T., & Teatini, P. (2020). Vulnerability of Venice’s coastland to relative sea-level rise. In Proceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences (Vol. 382, pp. 689–695). Copernicus GmbH. https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-382-689-2020

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