Fausto Guzzetti, Colin Peter Stark, and Paola Salvati (2005)
Evaluation of flood and landslide risk to the population in Italy
Environmental Management 36(1):15--36.
We have compiled a database of floods and
landslides that occurred in Italy between AD 1279 and 2002
and caused deaths, missing persons, injuries, and homelessness.
Analysis of the database indicates that more than 50,593 people died, went missing, or were injured in 2580
flood and landslide events. Harmful events were inventoried
in 26.3% of the 8103 Italian municipalities. Fatal events were
most frequent in the Alpine regions of northern Italy and were
caused by both floods and landslides. In southern Italy,
landslides were the principal agents of fatalities and were
most numerous in the Campania region. Casualties were
most frequent in the autumn. Fast-moving landslides,
including rock falls, rockslides, rock avalanches, and debris
flows, caused the largest number of deaths. In order to assess
the overall risk posed by these processes, we merged
the historical catalogs and identified 2682 ‘‘hydrogeomorphological’’
events that triggered single or multiple landslides
and floods. We estimated individual risk through the
calculation of mortality rates for both floods and landslides
and compared these rates to the death rates for other natural,
medical, and human-induced hazards in Italy. We used
the frequency distribution of events with fatalities to ascertain
the magnitude and frequency of the societal risks posed by
floods and landslides. We quantified these risks in a
Bayesian model that describes the probabilities of fatal flood
and landslide events in Italy.
distribution, landslide, risk
doi: 10.1007/s00267-003-0257-1