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Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss., 2, 155-208, 2005
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Landslide susceptibility mapping of Cekmece area (Istanbul, Turkey) by conditional probability

T. Y. Duman1, T. Can2, C. Gokceoglu3, and H. A. Nefeslioglu1
1General Directorate of Mineral Research and Exploration, Department of Geological Research, 06520 Ankara, Turkey
2Cukurova University, Department of Geological Engineering, 01330 Balcali, Adana, Turkey
3Hacettepe University, Department of Geological Engineering, Applied Geology Division, 06532 Beytepe, Ankara, Turkey

Abstract. As a result of industrialization, throughout the world, the cities have been growing rapidly for the last century. One typical example of these growing cities is Istanbul. Today, the population of Istanbul is over 10 millions. Depending on this rapid urbanization, new suitable areas for settlements and engineering structures are necessary. For this reason, the Cekmece area, west of the Istanbul metropolitan area, is selected as the study area, because the landslides are frequent in this area. The purpose of the present study is to produce landslide susceptibility map of the selected area by conditional probability approach. For this purpose, a landslide database was constructed by both air – photography and field studies. 19.2% of the selected study area is covered by landslides. Mainly, the landslides described in the area are generally located in the lithologies including the permeable sandstone layers and impermeable layers such as claystone, siltstone and mudstone layers. When considering this finding, it is possible to say that one of the main conditioning factors of the landslides in the study area is lithology. In addition to lithology, many landslide conditioning factors are considered during the landslide susceptibility analyses. As a result of the analyses, the class of 5–10° of slope, the class of 180–225 of aspect, the class of 25–50 of altitude, Danisment formation of the lithological units, the slope units of geomorphology, the class of 800–1000 m of distance from faults (DFF), the class of 75–100 m of distance from drainage (DFD) pattern, the class of 0–10m of distance from roads (DFR) and the class of low or impermeable unit of relative permeability map have the higher probability values than the other classes. When compared with the produced landslide susceptibility map, most of the landslides identified in the study area are found to be located in the most (54%) and moderate (40%) susceptible zones. This assessment is also supported by the performance analysis applied at end of the study. As a consequence, the landslide susceptibility map produced herein has a valuable tool for the planning purposes.

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Citation: Duman, T. Y., Can, T., Gokceoglu, C., and Nefeslioglu, H. A.: Landslide susceptibility mapping of Cekmece area (Istanbul, Turkey) by conditional probability, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss., 2, 155-208, 2005.   Bibtex   EndNote   Reference Manager