• Sorted by Date • Sorted by Last Name of First Author •
Liu, Jie, Kong, Sen, Jin, Shuanggen, Zhang, Yunlong, Liu, Xinqi, Nie, Shengkun, and Xu, Keke, 2025. Crustal stability and hazard assessment along the Xinjiang-Tibet Railway by GNSS and gravity data. Advances in Space Research, 76(2):718–733, doi:10.1016/j.asr.2025.05.021.
• from the NASA Astrophysics Data System • by the DOI System •
@ARTICLE{2025AdSpR..76..718L, author = {{Liu}, Jie and {Kong}, Sen and {Jin}, Shuanggen and {Zhang}, Yunlong and {Liu}, Xinqi and {Nie}, Shengkun and {Xu}, Keke}, title = "{Crustal stability and hazard assessment along the Xinjiang-Tibet Railway by GNSS and gravity data}", journal = {Advances in Space Research}, keywords = {Xinjiang-Tibet Railway, GRACE, Crustal stability, Multi-factor weighted overlay method}, year = 2025, month = jul, volume = {76}, number = {2}, pages = {718-733}, abstract = "{The Tibetan Plateau represents one of the most seismically active regions globally. The construction of the Xinjiang-Tibet Railway is profoundly affected by crustal deformation and geological hazards. To address the urgent need for regional crustal stability and risk assessment in this region, this study integrates large-scale observations from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite and GNSS data to extract vertical crustal deformation information along the railway route, along with multi-source geological, seismic, and meteorological data. Additionally, terrestrial water storage changes are a critical factor influencing stability. A multi- factor weighted overlay method is employed, incorporating ten evaluation indicators to assess crustal stability along the railway and develop a multidimensional framework for monitoring and evaluating regional crustal stability. The study also extends the research area by 40 km, 80 km, and 170 km. The assessment results reveal that Equivalent Water Height (EWH) variations, derived from GRACE satellite gravimetry, demonstrate relatively stable interannual fluctuations across the study region, while Terrestrial Water Storage Anomalies (TWSA) exhibit a modest declining trend, which amplifies with increasing spatial scale. Integrating GRACE satellite gravimetry and GNSS- derived deformation metrics, this study evaluates crustal stability indices and categorizes the study area into stable, moderately stable, and moderately unstable zones, highlighting spatial variations in regional tectonic stability. The northern section of the Xinjiang-Tibet Railway predominantly features stable to moderately stable conditions. In contrast, the southern section shows moderately unstable to unstable conditions, with instability expanding as the scope of analysis broadens. This evaluation framework offers critical insights and scientific support for infrastructure development and disaster mitigation strategies.}", doi = {10.1016/j.asr.2025.05.021}, adsurl = {https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/2025AdSpR..76..718L}, adsnote = {Provided by the SAO/NASA Astrophysics Data System} }
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