Title: Surface Deformation from Sentinel-1A InSAR: Relation to Seasonal Groundwater Extraction and Rainfall in Central Taiwan
Authors: Yang, Yi-Jie
Hwangl, Cheinway
Hung, Wei-Chia
Fuhrmann, Thomas
Chen, Yi-An
Wei, Shiang-Hung
土木工程學系
Department of Civil Engineering
Keywords: Hushan Reservoir;land subsidence;Sentinel-1;SBAS;Yunlin
Issue Date: 1-Dec-2019
Abstract: Extracting groundwater for agricultural, aquacultural, and industrial use in central Taiwan has caused large-scale land subsidence that poses a threat to the operation of the Taiwan High Speed Railway near Yunlin County. We detected Yunlin subsidence using the Sentinel-1A Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) by the Small BAseline Subset (SBAS) method from April 2016 to April 2017. We calibrated the initial InSAR-derived displacement rates using GPS measurements and reduced the velocity difference between the two sensors from 15.0 to 8.5 mm/a. In Yunlin's severe subsidence regions, cumulative displacements from InSAR and GPS showed that the dry-season subsidence contributed 60%-74% of the annual subsidence. The InSAR-derived vertical velocities matched the velocities from leveling to better than 10 mm/a. In regions with few leveling measurements, InSAR increased the spatial resolution of the vertical velocity field and identified two previously unknown subsidence spots over an industrial zone and steel factory. Annual significant subsidence areas (subsidence rate > 30 mm/a) from leveling from 2011 to 2017 increased with the declining dry-season rainfalls, suggesting that the dry-season rainfall was the deciding factor for land subsidence. A severe drought in 2015 (an El Nino year) dramatically increased the significant subsidence area to 659 km(2). Both InSAR and leveling detected similarly significant subsidence areas in 2017, showing that InSAR was an effective technique for assessing whether a subsidence mitigation measure worked. The newly opened Hushan Reservoir can supply surface water during dry seasons and droughts to counter rain shortage and can thereby potentially reduce land subsidence caused by groundwater extraction.
URI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rs11232817
http://hdl.handle.net/11536/153715
DOI: 10.3390/rs11232817
Journal: REMOTE SENSING
Volume: 11
Issue: 23
Begin Page: 0
End Page: 0
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