Open Access
Mining-induced Land Subsidence Detected by Sentinel-1 SAR Images: An Example from the Historical Tadeusz Kościuszko Salt Mine at Wapno, Greater Poland Voivodeship, Poland
Author(s) -
Thi Thu Huong KIM,
Hong Ha Tran,
Khac Luyen Bui,
Tomasz Lipecki
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
inżynieria mineralna
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.215
H-Index - 9
ISSN - 1640-4920
DOI - 10.29227/im-2021-02-04
Subject(s) - subsidence , interferometric synthetic aperture radar , mining engineering , settlement (finance) , ground subsidence , geology , groundwater related subsidence , deformation (meteorology) , physical geography , geography , remote sensing , synthetic aperture radar , geomorphology , oceanography , structural basin , world wide web , computer science , payment
There are many mines in Poland that have been in operation for over 100 years, with theTadeusz Kościuszko mine being a large salt mine in Wapno, northern Poland. The mine was closed in1977 due to the greatest catastrophe in the history of Polish mining, but in the first days of 2021, a verylarge hole has been created in this area due to land subsidence. This article uses InSAR technology withSentinel-1 images to determine settlement and ongoing deformation in this mine. The study results areuseful for policymakers, managers, and authorities because land subsidence has caused serious anddangerous effects on people living in the area. The results processed by the Persistent Scatterer InSAR(PSInSAR) method with the Sentinel Application Platform and the Stanford Method for PersistentScatterers software packages show that deformation in the Wapno village area has been detected in bothresidential and non-residential areas, with maximum subsidence of up to −19 mm/yr. The subsidence inthe mine reaches −12 mm/yr, and that at surrounding area range from 0 to −18.8 mm/yr.