The wireless sensors, developed using technology found in cell phones, are being tested and have been installed around an active landslide zone in the Monte Sano State Park in US.
A team from the Atmospheric Science Department at The University of Alabama in Huntsville is studying the sensors to see whether they can provide useful information about soil stability and the likelihood of an impending landslide.
In addition to weather instruments, the sensors use off-the-shelf technology that was developed for other uses, such as motion detectors that also are used in cell phones and in robotics.
The sensors connect to the Internet using inexpensive cell phone connections, so scientists can monitor their instruments without needing to either run wires into remote areas or have someone visit the sensor boxes regularly.
Eric Anderson, a research associate in UAH's Earth System Science Center, went to work with NASA which gave him access to Karthik Srinivasan, a University Space Research Association (USRA) scientist who invented the wireless sensors for NASA's SERVIR programme.
After seeing the sensors in action, Anderson recognised the potential value something similar might have in studying and monitoring landslides.
He took his idea to Dr Udaysankar Nair, an associate professor of atmospheric science. Nair and Anderson wrote a proposal that led to a USD 56,000 grant from UAH's University Research Infrastructure Initiative.
UAH graduate students Aaron Kaulfus and Brian Freitag field tested the sensor network and are testing computer models that could be linked to the network to provide the capability to predict landslides.
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