Short communication: Monitoring rockfalls with the Raspberry Shake

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Abstract

We evaluate the performance of the low-cost seismic sensor Raspberry Shake to identify and monitor rockfall activity in alpine environments. The test area is a slope adjacent to the Great Aletsch Glacier in the Swiss Alps, i.e. the Moosfluh deep-seated instability, which has recently undergone a critical acceleration phase. A local seismic network composed of three Raspberry Shake was deployed starting from May 2017 in order to record rockfall activity and its relation with the progressive rock-slope degradation potentially leading to a large rock-slope failure. Here we present a first assessment of the seismic data acquired from our network after a monitoring period of 1 year. We show that our network performed well during the whole duration of the experiment, including the winter period in severe alpine conditions, and that the seismic data acquired allowed us to clearly discriminate between rockfalls and other events. This work also provides general information on the potential use of such low-cost sensors in environmental seismology.

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APA

Manconi, A., Coviello, V., Galletti, M., & Seifert, R. (2018). Short communication: Monitoring rockfalls with the Raspberry Shake. Earth Surface Dynamics, 6(4), 1219–1227. https://doi.org/10.5194/esurf-6-1219-2018

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