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https://pubs.usgs.gov/publication/tm14A3 <-- shared USGS publication
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https://code.usgs.gov/grfintools/grfintools <-- shared USGS software release
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H/T Jonathan Perkins USGS
[ another open source resource for everyone from the USGS ~smile~ ]
#GIS #spatial #mapping #opensource #openlibrary #Grfin #software #package #regional #debrisflow #engineeringgeology #geology #inundation #spatialanalysis #spatiotemporal #geophysics #geophysical #massmovement #landslide #lahar #volcano #rock #avalanche #model #modeling #statistical #geostatistics #water #hydrology #downstream #elevation #remotesensing #DEM #flow #runout #risk #hazard #tools #slope #erosion #drainage #network #channel #channelisation #userguide
@USGS
Grfin Tools—User guide and methods for modeling landslide runout and debris-flow growth and inundation
The software package, Grfin Tools, can estimate potential runout from landslides or inundation from geophysical mass flows such as debris flows, lahars from volcanoes, and rock avalanches within a digital elevation model (DEM). Grfin is an acronym of growth + flow + inundation. The tools within this package apply simple, well-tested, empirical models of runout that are computationally efficient and require minimal parameters. These tools can be used individually (for example, to estimate debris-flow inundation) or in combination to represent a more complete series of linked processes, from landslide source areas, to unchannelized transport, to channelized flows. Grfin Tools can rapidly assess potential runout and inundation over large areas and the results are readily visualized in a geographic information system.Tools for assessing areas affected by runout and flow inundation include a height-to-length (H/L) ratio, angle-of-reach approach for estimating open-slope, unchannelized landslide runout, and volume-area scaling relations for assessing flow inundation...







