The city of Erbil (Kurdistan Region of Iraq) was established along a fertile alluvial plain in northern Mesopotamia during the Chalcolithic period and grew around the pristine citadel, which was likely built on top of fluvial features. Prior to the mid-20th century, Erbil was centred around the citadel and relied on traditional systems for water management such as artificial basins and qanats. The city underwent intense urban expansion since the 1950s and changed its shape due to the construction of roads and residential and industrial areas, which led to the obliteration of the pristine fluvial network. The analysis of historical and current satellite images highlights the profound modification of the landscape triggered by human actions and a progressive shift of local land use from agricultural to urban. This, coupled with human agency on the natural hydrography led to the increase susceptibility of the city to geomorphological hazard (especially floods). The geomorphological reconstruction of the urban landscape of Erbil aimed at explaining how human groups settled the region since the prehistory and contributed modifying natural surface processes. Our reconstruction on landforms evolution based on satellite and historical aerial images and field control allowing the reconstruction of changes in land use over time. Our investigation suggests that during the Anthropocene the dynamic of urbanization reach a tipping point, when excessive urban growth suffers the effect of geomorphological hazard. For that reason, urbanization in the Anthropocene must consider the existence of natural geomorphological processes. This is preliminary contribution to the “GEOTRes – Geoheritage threating and resilience: mapping the impact of geomorphic and human processes in sensitive morphoclimatic environments” projects supported by MUR, PRIN2022 (PI. R.S. Azzoni)
Reconstruction of the fluvial landscape of Erbil (Kurdistan Region of Iraq): the anthropogenic impact on landforms and present-day geomorphological hazard / L. Forti, A. Zerboni, M. Pelfini, R.S. Azzoni - In: Climate change and the role of early-career geomorphologists[s.l] : Società Geologica Italiana, 2024. (( convegno X AIGeo Italian Young Geomorphologists’ Day & III IAG International YoungGeomorphologists’ Meeting : March, 1st - 2nd tenutosi a Venezia nel 2024 [10.3301/ABSGI.2024.01].
Reconstruction of the fluvial landscape of Erbil (Kurdistan Region of Iraq): the anthropogenic impact on landforms and present-day geomorphological hazard
L. FortiPrimo
;A. ZerboniSecondo
;M. PelfiniPenultimo
;R.S. AzzoniUltimo
2024
Abstract
The city of Erbil (Kurdistan Region of Iraq) was established along a fertile alluvial plain in northern Mesopotamia during the Chalcolithic period and grew around the pristine citadel, which was likely built on top of fluvial features. Prior to the mid-20th century, Erbil was centred around the citadel and relied on traditional systems for water management such as artificial basins and qanats. The city underwent intense urban expansion since the 1950s and changed its shape due to the construction of roads and residential and industrial areas, which led to the obliteration of the pristine fluvial network. The analysis of historical and current satellite images highlights the profound modification of the landscape triggered by human actions and a progressive shift of local land use from agricultural to urban. This, coupled with human agency on the natural hydrography led to the increase susceptibility of the city to geomorphological hazard (especially floods). The geomorphological reconstruction of the urban landscape of Erbil aimed at explaining how human groups settled the region since the prehistory and contributed modifying natural surface processes. Our reconstruction on landforms evolution based on satellite and historical aerial images and field control allowing the reconstruction of changes in land use over time. Our investigation suggests that during the Anthropocene the dynamic of urbanization reach a tipping point, when excessive urban growth suffers the effect of geomorphological hazard. For that reason, urbanization in the Anthropocene must consider the existence of natural geomorphological processes. This is preliminary contribution to the “GEOTRes – Geoheritage threating and resilience: mapping the impact of geomorphic and human processes in sensitive morphoclimatic environments” projects supported by MUR, PRIN2022 (PI. R.S. Azzoni)| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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