Development of a long term monitoring network of sensitive clay slopes in Québec in the context of climate change

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Abstract

The Government of Québec recently initiated the deployment of a vast groundwater pressures monitoring network in postglacial marine clays to document their variations in time and improve our understanding of the relationship between failure initiation and climate in clay slopes. This project aims at evaluating the impacts of climate change on clay-slope stability and how it can be integrated in landslide risk management to improve public safety. Hydrogeological data will be acquired at sites located throughout the Québec Province’s post-glacial clay deposits to create a public georeferenced index of typical hydrogeological conditions. The project goes beyond the characterization of groundwater pressures and their variations in clay slopes. Indeed, slope deformation will be measured at several sites. Also, two sites in flat terrain will be instrumented in order to evaluate mechanical properties of clay layers in simple 1-D conditions and groundwater recharge. The unsaturated clay crust in slopes susceptible to superficial landslides will be characterized and instrumented. The current lifetime of the monitoring project has been set to a period of 25 years.

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APA

Cloutier, C., Locat, P., Demers, D., Fortin, A., Locat, J., Leroueil, S., … Bilodeau, C. (2017). Development of a long term monitoring network of sensitive clay slopes in Québec in the context of climate change. In Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research (Vol. 46, pp. 549–558). Springer Netherlands. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-56487-6_47

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