Landslides in sea cliffs area along the Capri Coast (Gulf of Naples, Italy)

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Abstract

Capri island is located in the Tyrrhenian Sea, on the south side of the Gulf of Naples, Italy. The island is almost completely bordered by high and steep rocky coasts (coastal cliffs) of structural control, often articulated in a succession of prominent headlands and embayments. The sea cliffs affected by landslide processes are evident in the eastern coastal area resulting in a high degree of hazard in this stretch. The morphology of the coastal system consists in a cliff with sloping shore platform at the base of the cliff. The presence of the shore platform, which controls the erosional and shaping activities by wave motion of the cliff, play an important role and represent the main hazard factor. The other main erosional processes on rocky coast represent subordinated hazard factors. Namely, structural and stratigraphic features (hard limestone, above clastic less resistant rocks, involved in rock falls caused by basal mechanical wave erosion; the rock strata dipping seaward; presence of NW-SE trending fault), high and very steep cliffs, limestone features. Instead, the western sector of the island of Capri is present a limestone coast with a plunging cliff; the water depth at the base of the cliff is greater than the breaker depth. The waves are reflected from the cliff face and the mechanical wave erosion and subsequent mass movements do not occur; weathering and bio-erosion processes are the major erosive mechanisms. As a result the coastal hazard for the western sector is very low. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013.

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APA

Pennetta, M., & Russo, E. L. (2013). Landslides in sea cliffs area along the Capri Coast (Gulf of Naples, Italy). In Landslide Science and Practice: Complex Environment (Vol. 5, pp. 119–127). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-31427-8_15

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