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This hazard category also covers hazards such as:

  • Sinkhole: A sinkhole is a closed depression in karst (a landscape resulting from the dissolution of soluble rock) by current or palaeo internal drainage, also known as a doline. This is one of several hazards that result in subsidence, i.e., lowering or collapse of the ground (adapted from USGS, no date; and BGS, no date).
  • Permafrost loss: Permafrost is defined as the ground that remains frozen under 0°C for a minimum of two consecutive years. Permafrost loss, also known as permafrost thaw is the progressive loss of ground ice in permafrost, usually due to input of heat. Thaw can occur over decades to centuries over the entire depth of permafrost ground, with impacts occurring while thaw progresses.

Risk drivers and reduction measures

Beneath the depth of influence of atmospheric change in moisture content, the water demand of vegetation, particularly trees on clay soils dominates the moisture content changes that lead to the soils shrinking (subsidence) and swelling (heave). Where subsidence and heave occur beneath or close to properties and infrastructure this can result in damage (Florida Department of Environmental Protection, 2020). The most obvious way in which expansive soils can damage foundations is by uplift as they swell with moisture increases. Swelling soils lift up and crack lightly-loaded, continuous strip footings, and frequently cause distress in floor slabs. Uplift is commonly differential, reflecting the different resisting forces across the structural foundations.

The extensive distribution of these soils across the world has necessitated characterisation through index testing to inform remedial measures. At its simplest, the plasticity indices are utilised to define inorganic clays with inherent swelling capacity (e.g., BRE, 1993). Expansion of soils can also be measured in the laboratory directly, by immersing a remolded soil sample and measuring its volume change or using LiDAR techniques (Hobbs et al., 2014).

The best way to avoid damage from expansive soils is to extend building foundations beneath the zone of water content fluctuation as modified to reflect the presence of vegetation (Rogers et al., no date).

Latest Land subsidence additions in the Knowledge Base

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Research briefs

A study published in Science Advances reveals that sinking land — not just rising oceans alone — will be the main cause of future coastal flooding along Indonesia’s densely populated Java Island, putting millions at risk sooner than expected.

Virginia Tech
Update

When a large hole recently opened up in the deck of a bridge in Châteauguay, Québec, many people were understandably alarmed.

Conversation Media Group, the
Update

The “Fios fault” in the Val d’Anniviers region in southern Switzerland has now stretched to 250 metres and continues to grow. Authorities fear part of the mountainside could give way and are preparing safety measures and local evacuation plans.

swissinfo.ch - International Service of the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation
Update

Philly’s many sinkholes stem from aging, leaking water and sewer pipes that wash away soil. The region’s geology also contributes to land subsidence. Repairs are slow because fixing leaks is complex and the city’s infrastructure is old.

Conversation Media Group, the
Iraq drought and desert
Update

Amid chronic groundwater depletion, water overallocation, land and soil degradation, deforestation, and pollution, all compounded by global heating, a UN report today declared the dawn of an era of global water bankruptcy.

United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health
Update

Jakarta is sinking fast due to heavy groundwater use and rapid urban growth, leaving 40% of the city below sea level and worsening floods. Seawalls help only slightly, and experts warn deeper fixes are urgently needed.

Straits Times, the
Viet Nam: Central Mekong Delta Region Connectivity Project
Research briefs

A new study published in Nature finds human-driven land sinking now outpaces sea-level rise in many of the world’s major delta systems, threatening more than 236 million people.

Virginia Tech
Update

On a winter day in Northern Canada, the ground is quietly accumulating heat. That hidden warming is destabilising the frozen foundation on which northern communities depend.

Conversation Media Group, the
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