PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Predicting underwater landslides before they strike

2025-05-30
(Press-News.org) Below ocean wind farms, oil rigs and other offshore installations are mammoth networks of underwater structures, including pipelines, anchors, risers and cables, that are essential to harness the energy source. But much like terrestrial structures, these subsea constructions are also vulnerable to natural events, like submarine landslides, that can hamper the productivity of installations below the sea.

Researchers at Texas A&M may now be able to accurately predict the occurrence of marine landslides using underwater site characterization data. 

“One of the main events threatening onshore and offshore facilities is landslides: They can completely wipe out all these installations,” said Zenon Medina-Cetina, associate professor in the Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering. “We show in our paper that information from multiple disciplines in the correct sequence is needed to better understand the probability of landslide development at any place and time.”

The researchers have published their work in the journal Landslides.

Before any offshore project begins, such as oil and gas operations or wind farms, a team gathers information about the seabed, sub-seabed and environmental conditions. This site characterization helps to mitigate potential geohazards and informs the design, construction and installation of offshore structures. This process involves the collaborative efforts of a number of personnel, including geophysicists, geomatic technologists, geotechnical engineers and geologists. Medina-Cetina’s model calibration methodology uses site characterization information to predict the occurrence of underwater landslides.

My job is to make sure that under any geo-hazardous conditions, these offshore structures are going to be safe and are going to remain where they were designed to be.

Zenon Medina-Cetina

Although data from personnel with different expertise are needed to tell the story of the land below the sea, the order in which they perform their tasks toward site characterization is very important. This sequence, if violated due to budgetary or time constraints, could lead to uncertainty in the prediction of landslides.

“It is very important to start with the geophysicist and then bring in the geologist and then have the geomatics group working with the geotechnical engineers,” said Medina-Cetina. “As an analogy, imagine that I need to train a baby to walk while teaching it how to run. This is going to be much harder, right? A systematic sequence on the use of evidence ensures that the landslide models are better calibrated by learning from the data as they are being produced.”

The researchers noted that companies funding offshore projects typically lose money when they are not confident that the designs of the subsea civil infrastructures can withstand geohazards. Thus, Medina-Cetina and his team’s model calibration methodology uses a probabilistic approach called Bayesian statistics to maximize the information produced in site investigation data. This methodology, they demonstrated, increases the accuracy and confidence of the landslide model when it makes predictions.

“My job is to make sure that under any geo-hazardous conditions, these offshore structures are going to be safe and are going to remain where they were designed to be,” said Medina-Cetina. “What we're trying to say is it matters how you do the sequence of these site investigations, and how you integrate those data to train the landslide models, so that you can be more confident on the occurrence of potential submarine landslides.”

Other contributors to this research are Patricia Varela from Geosyntec Consultants, Inc and Billy Hernawan, a student from the civil and environmental engineering department at Texas A&M.

This research is funded by the Research Partnership to Secure Energy for America and PLENUM Soft.

By Texas A&M Engineering

###

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

What will it take to reduce primary care doctor burnout?

2025-05-30
America’s primary care doctors are burning out, cutting back their hours, and leaving their practices early, driven in part by the demands of handling the flood of digital messages from their patients. But a trio of new University of Michigan studies offer hope for easing this crisis, and improving both the care that patients get and the work lives of those who provide it. The studies could help primary care clinics nationwide take steps to keep the bedrock of American health care from crumbling further. All three papers, published in the Journal of ...

Small currents, big impact: Satellite breakthrough reveals hidden ocean forces

2025-05-30
What if some of the smallest ocean currents turned out to be some of the most powerful forces shaping our planet’s climate? This question is at the center of new research co-led by Texas A&M University Department of Oceanography Associate Professor Jinbo Wang, whose work is featured on the cover of the April 17 issue of Nature. It’s a big moment for Wang and his colleagues and the global science community — marking a milestone in a billion-dollar, international water mission two decades in the making, and reflecting Texas A&M University’s long-term strategy ...

Single-atom catalysts change spin state when boosted by a magnetic field

2025-05-30
The job of a catalyst is to ultimately speed up reactions, which could reduce an hour-long process into several minutes. It has recently been shown that using external magnetic fields to modulate spin states of single-atom catalysts (SACs) is highly effective - enhancing oxygen evolution reaction magnetocurrent by a staggering 2,880%. With this in mind, researchers at Tohoku University proposed a completely novel strategy to apply an external magnetic field to modulate spin states, and thereby improve electrocatalytic performance. This study provides valuable insights regarding the development of efficient and sustainable electrochemical technologies ...

Integrated metasurface for quantum analog computation: A new scheme to phase reconstruction

2025-05-30
Researchers have proposed an metasurface-integrated quantum analog computing system. This system ingeniously combines multi-channel metasurfaces with quantum entanglement sources, enabling quantitative phase reconstruction with high signal-to-noise ratio at low signal photon levels. Traditional phase reconstruction often involves complex operation steps, while this technology effectively simplifies the complexity of traditional phase reconstruction. It shows application potential in multiple important fields. For example, in the field of optical chips, it helps improve the performance ...

PolyU research reveals rising soil nitrous acid emissions driven by climate change and fertilisation accelerate global ozone pollution

2025-05-30
Ozone pollution is a global environmental concern that not only threatens human health and crop production, but also worsens global warming. While the formation of ozone is often attributed to anthropogenic pollutants, soil emissions are revealed to be another important source. The Hong Kong Polytechnic University (PolyU) researchers have examined global soil nitrous acid (HONO) emissions data from 1980 to 2016 and incorporated them in a chemistry-climate model to unveil the pivotal role soil HONO emissions play in the increase of the ozone mixing ratio in air and its negative impact on vegetation. Soil ...

The EU should allow gene editing to make organic farming more sustainable, researchers say

2025-05-30
To achieve the European Green Deal’s goal of 25% organic agriculture by 2030, researchers argue that new genomic techniques (NGTs) should be allowed without pre-market authorization in organic as well as conventional food production. NGTs—also known as gene editing-—are classified under the umbrella of GMOs, but they involve more subtle genetic tweaks. In an opinion paper publishing May 30 in the Cell Press journal Cell Reports Sustainability, the researchers describe how NGTs could enable rapid development of crops that are climate resilient, produce higher yields, and require less fertilizers and pesticides.  “This ...

At-home heart attacks and cardiac deaths on the rise since COVID-19 pandemic

2025-05-30
Heart attacks are the leading cause of death globally, yet some statistics from many different countries suggest these events declined in frequency since the COVID-19 pandemic. Mass General Brigham researchers evaluated whether these cardiac trends reflect a true change in event rates, or if they reflect that more people are dying at home rather than in hospitals. Their findings highlight potential shortcomings of cardiac care during and in the years following the height of the pandemic, suggesting ...

Projected outcomes of removing fluoride from U.S. public water systems

2025-05-30
About The Study: This cost-effectiveness analysis found that cessation of public water fluoridation would increase tooth decay and health system costs in the U.S. Despite concerns regarding toxic effects associated with high levels of fluoride, this model demonstrates the substantial ongoing benefits of water fluoridation at safe levels currently recommended by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the National Toxicity Program, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Lisa Simon, MD, DMD, email lsimon@bwh.harvard.edu. To ...

Parental education, own education, and cognitive function in middle-aged and older adults

2025-05-30
About The Study: In this cohort study of middle-aged and older adults across 4 countries, both higher maternal and paternal education were generally associated with slower cognitive decline, and these associations were mediated by participants’ own education. These findings highlight the long-term relevance of parental education for offspring cognitive health across diverse cultural or socioeconomic contexts, and support the potential benefits of improving educational attainment to reduce intergenerational disparities in late-life cognitive health. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, ...

Sacred moment experiences among internal medicine physicians

2025-05-30
About The Study: In this national survey of internal medicine physicians, experiencing sacred moments —meaningful, memorable, and sometimes spiritual moments of connection— is common; discussing them with colleagues is not. These findings suggest that frequently experiencing sacred moments and discussing them with colleagues could bolster physician well-being. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Jessica Ameling, MPH, email jameling@med.umich.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study shows blood conservation technique reduces odds of transfusion by 27% during heart surgery

Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development

Complete brain activity map revealed for the first time

Children with sickle cell disease face higher risk of dental issues, yet many don’t receive needed care

First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice

Mechanical forces drive evolutionary change

Safe, practical underground carbon storage could reduce warming by only 0.7°C – almost 10 times less than previously thought

Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora

Patient reports aren’t anecdotal—they’re valuable data

Mount Sinai study discovers potential link between stress and type 2 diabetes

Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly

Precision genetic target provides hope for Barth syndrome treatment

Colorless solar windows: Transforming architecture into clean power plants

SwRI-proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close

Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation adds no risk to procedure

New research finds 62% of AFib patients were unaware of the condition before diagnosis

69 schools awarded wellness grants to support healthier communities nationwide

Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial—The TARGET statement

Nonregistration, discontinuation, and nonpublication of randomized trials

Improving the reporting on health equity in observational research (STROBE-Equity)

Bacteria that ‘shine a light’ on microplastic pollution

SeoulTech develop hybrid polymer-CNT electrodes for safer brain-machine interfaces

From symptoms to biology: Neurodegeneration in paraventricular thalamus in bipolar disorder

From longevity to cancer: Understanding the dual nature of polyamines

Faraday Institution commits a further £9M to battery research to deliver commercial impact

Study: Evaluating chatbot accuracy in the fast-changing blood cancer field

A ‘wasteful’ plant process makes a key prenatal vitamin. Climate change may reduce it.

Targeted cell removal offers treatment hope

Here we glow: New organic liquid provides efficient phosphorescence

Countries’ carbon budget math is broken

[Press-News.org] Predicting underwater landslides before they strike