Condition of gre
Fig.5 Condition of groundwater table
Soil and Geology
k map of
the total thickness above bed ruck
Fig.6 Soil and Geology
to be the vegetation area, which is rated from
1 to
Rainfall
Guidicini and Iwasa(1977) presented a study on
the occurrence of landslide relation to the
cumulative precipitation record in Brazil. Based
on 46-year record of mean annual
precipitation, they also established a danger
level chart which is the relationship between
rainfall and landslides. Their methodologies are
applied for this study.
Rainfall has to be analysed in three important
aspects; climate cycles over a period of year,
rainfall accumulation in a given year, intensities
of given storms. Fortunately, rainfall records
of 10-year period(1978-1987) were avaliable
from Suwon Meteorological Observatory Station
(Environmental Impact Assessment Report,
1989). The data reveals that the average
annual rainfall is about 1200 to 1300 mm. In
general, rainfall is concentrated between June
and September, recording about 820-830 mm.
One of the heaviest storm on Sept.1, 1984
marked 190.5 mm of precipitation during 24
hours. On the basis of the chart of Guidicini
and Iwasa, mean annual precipitation were
divided into four categories; above 2500mm(4),
2000-2500mm(3), 1200-2000mm(2), below 1200
mm(1). According to the chart, the mean
678
OVERLAY PROCESS(Weight & Rating)
Hoc rnm HIT TE 0
TLR ed EY 491; 89-3
Fig.7 Overlay process
Production of the final map
iB) Piüal map
Fig.8 Production of final map
annual precipitation of the study area belongs
to the rating(2).
Soil
A soil classification map(Fig.6-A) was produced
on the basis of agricultural soil maps(Institute
of Agricultural Sciences, 1977) and laboratory
tests. The classification was made according to
the Unified Soil Classification System. Important
factors for rating system of a given soil are:
soil texture, permeability, shear strength and
weight ratio of sand and clay.
Silty sands(SM) and clayey sands(SC) occupy
in most of the study area. Laboratory tests
showed that the contents of silt were about
29-43% and those of clay were about 6-15%.
Flow type of landslide is common in the fine-
grained granular soil zone. Soil formation is
considerably thick(about 5-10m). Considering the
soil characteristics of the study area, the soils
are classified in three groups: SM(1), SC(2),
ML(3:silis and very fine sands). Although
gravelly sands are highly permeable(estimated
permeability: about 10? m/s), they fall on the
lowest rating. They are mostly located on the
very gentle slopes of less than 5%, therefore
they do not affect on landslide occurrences in
the study area(especially along the side of
streams).