Landslides are one of the most critical and destructive geohazards. Widespread development of human activities and settlements combined with the effects of climate change on weather are resulting in a high increase in the frequency and destructive power of landslides, making them a major threat to human life and the economy. In this paper, we explore methodologies to map newly-occurred landslides using Sentinel-2 imagery automatically. All approaches presented are framed as a bi-temporal change detection problem, requiring only a pair of Sentinel-2 images, taken respectively before and after a landslide-triggering event. Furthermore, we introduce a novel deep learning architecture for fusing Sentinel-2 bi-temporal image pairs with Digital Elevation Model (DEM) data, showcasing its promising performances w.r.t. other change detection models in the literature. As a parallel task, we address limitations in existing datasets by creating a novel geodatabase, which includes manually validated open-access landslide inventories over heterogeneous ecoregions of the world. We release both code and dataset with an open-source license.
Landslide mapping from Sentinel-2 imagery through change detection
A novel deep learning architecture for fusing Sentinel-2 bi-temporal image pairs with DEM data is introduced for automatic landslide mapping, demonstrating superior performance compared to existing models.
- Year
- 2024
- Venue
- arXiv 2024
- Authors
- 3
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- Abstract onlyARXIV-DEFAULT
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- arxiv.org/abs/2405.20161ARXIV-DEFAULT
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