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<!DOCTYPE article SYSTEM "http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/inc/nhess/copernicus.dtd">
<article language="en">
	<journal>
		<journal_title>Natural Hazards and Earth System Science</journal_title>
		<journal_url>www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net</journal_url>
		<issn>1561-8633</issn>
		<eissn>1684-9981</eissn>
		<volume_number>3</volume_number>
		<issue_number>1/2</issue_number>
		<publication_year>2003</publication_year>
	</journal>
	<doi>10.5194/nhess-3-43-2003</doi>
	<article_url>http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/3/43/2003/</article_url>
	<abstract_html>http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/3/43/2003/nhess-3-43-2003.html</abstract_html>
	<fulltext_pdf>http://www.nat-hazards-earth-syst-sci.net/3/43/2003/nhess-3-43-2003.pdf</fulltext_pdf>
	<start_page>43</start_page>
	<end_page>52</end_page>
	<publication_date>0000-00-00</publication_date>
	<article_title content_type="html">The relationship between landslide activity and weather: examples from Hungary</article_title>
	<authors>
		<author numeration="1" affiliations="1">
			<name>J. Szabó</name>
		</author>
	</authors>
	<affiliations>
		<affiliation numeration="1" content_type="html">Department of Physical Geography, P.O. Box 9, H-4010 Debrecen, Hungary</affiliation>
	</affiliations>
	<abstract content_type="html">The paper presents
      the impact of irregular rainfall events triggering landslides in the
      regional context of landslides in Hungary. The author’s experience,
      gathered from decades of observations, confirms that landslide processes
      are strongly correlate with precipitation events in all three landscape
      types (hill regions of unconsolidated sediments; high bluffs along river
      banks and lake shores; mountains of Tertiary stratovolcanoes). Case
      studies for each landscape type underline that new landslides are
      triggered and old ones are reactivated by extreme winter precipitation
      events. This assertion is valid mainly for shallow and translational
      slides. Wet autumns favour landsliding, while the triggering influence of
      intense summer rainfalls is of a subordinate nature. A recent increasing
      problem lies in the fact that on previously unstable slopes, stabilised
      during longer dry intervals, an intensive cultivation starts, thus
      increasing the damage caused by movements during relatively infrequent wet
      winters.</abstract>
	<references>
	</references>
</article>

