Montgomery Jack, Wartman Joesph, Reed A Nicole, Gallant Aaron P, Hutabarat Daniel, Mason H Benjamin
Auburn University, Auburn, AL, USA.
University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Data Brief. 2021 Jan 15;34:106742. doi: 10.1016/j.dib.2021.106742. eCollection 2021 Feb.
The M7.5 Palu-Donggala earthquake occurred on 28 September 2018 and caused significant damage in Palu City and the surrounding Central Sulawesi region of Indonesia. The earthquake initiated a series of catastrophic landslides (classified as ) [1,2], collapsed buildings, and generated tsunami waves that impacted Palu Bay's coast. The earthquake claimed over 4000 lives, making it the deadliest natural disaster of 2018. We performed a post-earthquake field reconnaissance and collected perishable data at the sites of five significant flowslides (named for the communities where they occurred: , and ), as well as at other damage locations in the mesoseismal region. Our field team consisted of five U.S.-based members, who were sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation-supported Geotechnical Extreme Events Reconnaissance (GEER) organization [3], in collaboration with geologists, geotechnical engineers, and other researchers from Indonesia's Center for Earthquake Studies (PusGen) and the Indonesian Society of Geotechnical Engineers (HATTI) [this international team is collectively referred to as the Palu Earthquake ";" team]. The GEER team arrived at Palu City on 13 November 2018 and conducted five days of extensive fieldwork using instrumentation from the Natural Hazards Reconnaissance Facility (known as the "RAPID") [4,5], including mobile data collection software, digital imaging systems, high-resolution Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) antennas, and unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs, or ";drones"). The resulting dataset includes over 2000 geotagged photographs, UAV images, ground coordinates, and other field measurements and observations, as well as associated post-processed geospatial data products (point clouds, digital surface models, orthomosaic images). Additionally, we used remote sensing data (i.e., pre- and post-event satellite imagery) to generate displacement vectors for over 1200 structures affected by the flowslides. The complete reconnaissance dataset is openly available on DesignSafe [6]. The data collected by the field team and subsequent mapping efforts, which document the morphology and patterns of movements of the flowslides, may be used by researchers studying liquefaction-induced flowslides. In addition, the displacement mapping provides a unique dataset for researchers who are calibrating and verifying simulation models of landslide displacements, or who are seeking a validation dataset for image correlation analysis (including machine learning routines). This dataset is associated with original research presented in ";East Palu Valley Flowslides Induced by the 2018 M 7.5 Palu-Donggala Earthquake" [1] and also is the basis of research presented by Gallant et al. [2].
2018年9月28日发生的7.5级帕卢-栋加拉地震在印度尼西亚帕卢市及周边中苏拉威西地区造成了严重破坏。地震引发了一系列灾难性山体滑坡(分类为 )[1,2]、建筑物倒塌,并产生了冲击帕卢湾海岸的海啸波。这场地震造成4000多人死亡,成为2018年最致命的自然灾害。我们进行了震后实地勘察,并在五个重大泥石流现场(以发生地所在社区命名: 、 和 )以及中震区的其他受损地点收集了易腐数据。我们的实地考察队由五名美国成员组成,他们由美国国家科学基金会支持的岩土工程极端事件勘察(GEER)组织赞助[3],与来自印度尼西亚地震研究中心(PusGen)和印度尼西亚岩土工程师协会(HATTI)的地质学家、岩土工程师及其他研究人员合作[这个国际团队统称为帕卢地震“ ”团队]。GEER团队于2018年11月13日抵达帕卢市,并使用自然灾害勘察设施(称为“RAPID”)[4,5]的仪器进行了为期五天的广泛实地工作,包括移动数据采集软件、数字成像系统、高分辨率全球导航卫星系统(GNSS)天线和无人驾驶飞行器(UAV,即“无人机”)。由此产生的数据集包括2000多张带有地理标签的照片、无人机图像、地面坐标以及其他实地测量和观测数据,以及相关的后处理地理空间数据产品(点云、数字表面模型、正射镶嵌图像)。此外,我们使用遥感数据(即震前和震后卫星图像)为受泥石流影响的1200多个建筑物生成了位移矢量。完整的勘察数据集可在DesignSafe上公开获取[6]。实地考察队收集的数据以及后续的测绘工作记录了泥石流的形态和运动模式,可供研究液化引发的泥石流的研究人员使用。此外,位移测绘为校准和验证山体滑坡位移模拟模型的研究人员或寻求图像相关分析(包括机器学习程序)验证数据集的研究人员提供了一个独特的数据集。这个数据集与“2018年M 7.5级帕卢-栋加拉地震引发的东帕卢谷泥石流”[1]中提出的原创研究相关,也是加兰特等人[2]提出研究的基础。