Stability Monitoring and Analysis of High and Steep Slope of a Hydropower Station

State Key Laboratory for Geomechanics and Deep Underground Engineering, China University of Mining and Technology-Beijing, Beijing 100083, China School of Mechanics and Civil Engineering, China University of Mining and Technology, Beijing 100083, China China Three Gorges Construction Management Co., Ltd., Beijing 100038, China Changjiang Survey, Planning, Design and Research Co. Ltd., Wuhan 430010, China Yangtze Ecology and Environment Co., Ltd., Wuhan 430062, China


Introduction
The large deformation of high and steep slopes leads to widespread and catastrophic geological hazards. The high and steep slopes of a hydropower station are among the most common and dangerous morphologies. The construction and operation of the plant can trigger or reactivate such morphologies and significantly threaten human lives and properties [1,2]. Consequently, significant efforts have been made to monitor such slopes and to design and implement effective countermeasures.
At present, although brilliant achievements have been made in the excavation disturbance [3][4][5] and rainwater seepage [6][7][8] of high and steep slope projects, they have also paid a heavy price. Deformation and destruction phenomena of different degrees and scales will affect the construction of high slope projects in water conservancy and hydropower projects. For example, the left and right abutment slopes of Miaowei Hydropower Station have undergone significant deformation during the excavation process. With the progress of the excavation, five significant deformations occurred on the left abutment slope, and a landslide occurred on the right abutment slope from 1340 m to 1384 m, severely affecting the construction [9,10]. Many scholars have analyzed the deformation mechanism of high steep slopes under excavation conditions. In order to analyze the loosening characteristics of columnar jointed basalts, the temporal-spatial evolution of the loosening depths and degrees of the leftbank slope were investigated through single-hole acoustic wave tests and visual inspections with borehole cameras.
The tests were carried out in the columnar jointed basalt test section of the left bank dam foundation of Baihetan hydropower station [11][12][13]. For high dam projects with characteristics of high water head, large flood discharge, and narrow canyon, there is a class of rock slope instability problems that is induced by rainfall and flood discharge atomized rain. Here, atomized rain refers to the rain produced by the discharge of flood from high dams. Due to rainfall infiltration being the most frequent triggering factor for natural high steep rock slope failure, substantial research has been carried out to study the failure mechanisms of rainfall-induced landslides. This class of rock slope stability problems is mainly affected by the mechanical parameter reduction of structural planes and the internal pore water pressure [14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22].
The complex internal factors such as lithology and rock mass structure of the high-steep rock slope [23][24][25] and the external factors such as construction disturbances and heavy rain may change the slope during construction and operation. Many scholars have carried out microscopic experiments on rock crack growth to better understand the process and mechanism of rock slope failure, obtaining interesting research results [26][27][28][29][30][31][32]. In order to reflect the real mechanical effect of the rock mass and to ensure a stable state of the slope, slope monitoring projects are needed. Nowadays, many kinds of slope stability monitoring technologies and methods exist, from the traditional total station, the inclined pipe, the pressure gauge, the rain gauge, and the displacement meter [33] to the new type of the GPS [34], the laser range finder [35], the synthetic aperture radar [36], the ground-based interferometric radar [37], and the geological radar [38].
Research on slope stability monitoring and early warning technology is one of the leading research topics in the field of geotechnical engineering, and many scholars have investigated it. An early warning monitoring system is established to collect data such as seismic waves, pressures, and groundwater levels and activated the early warning signal when the instrument produced a signal outside the range [39], taking the excavation of the high slope on the left bank of Jinping I Hydropower Station as the research object. The monitoring results of the deformation of the graphite rod convergence meter of the flat hole, the horizontal observation of the valley width, the load of the anchor cable, and the deformation of the shear hole were comprehensively analyzed. Furthermore, the deformation law of the slope rock mass was obtained [40].
Based on the mechanics of the sliding body, sliding bed, and theory of monitoring anchor cable interaction as the theoretical basis, the principle of mechanical monitoring of the relative motion state of a sliding body and a sliding bed was put forward. Moreover, the multifactor monitoring was changed into single sliding force mechanical quantity monitoring, and the relationship between the sliding force and the monitoring pretightening force was given [41,42]. Based on the above principles, a remote monitoring and forecasting system for landslide geological hazards was developed for the real-time remote monitoring of dynamic changes of disturbance forces. The proposed approach overcomes the bottleneck of conventional deformation monitoring and realizes monitoring and early warning of deep sliding forces [43][44][45].
This study takes the slope of Wudongde Hydropower Station as the research object and analyzes the slope deformation mechanism caused by excavation and rainwater infiltration through field investigation and slope deformation monitoring data. In addition, in order to better monitor the large deep deformation of the slope rock mass caused by the infiltration of atomized rain, a remote monitoring and early warning system for the force of the anchor cable is introduced. The monitoring system will provide a reasonable and scientific reference for subsequent slope construction.   Figure 1). The elevation of the left side slope of the outlet of the spillway tunnel of the hydropower station is more than 1070 m, which is a naturally exposed rock slope. The altitude from 1070 m to 1760 m is a steep slope with an average inclination of 55°. Before the excavation of the slope, the area below 1070 m elevation is a gentle slope formed by the Huashangou deposit, with an inclination of 10°~35°. The artificial slope structure is a transverse slope. The highest elevation line is about 970 m, the excavation of the plunge pond foundation corridor is of 786.5 m elevation, and that of the artificial slope is 183.5 m.

Stratigraphic
Structure and Lithology. The engineering slope and natural slope above 925 m elevation are sedimentary caprock strata. The strata trending NNW-SSE dipping at an angle of 30°toward E, and the angle between the strike of the stratum and the strike of the slope is about 3°~37°, forming a gently inclined reverse slope. The engineering slope below 925 m elevation consists of folded strata that trend SW-NE and dip about 80°toward S. The strike of left side slope of the exit of the flood discharge tunnel is 193°, and the angle between the strike of the rock stratum and the slope forms a steep, transverse slope of about 57°~83°( Figure 2). The strata exposed before the excavation are the quaternary Huashangou accumulation body and the folded basement snowfall group, the sedimentary caprock Guanyinya Formation, and the Dengying Formation ( Figure 3).

Hydrometeorological Conditions.
Wudongde Hydropower Station is located in the dry and hot valley of Jinsha River. The average annual precipitation is 600 mm-800 mm, the rainfall is relatively concentrated, and the precipitation from June to October accounts for 81% of the annual precipitation. The average maximum temperature in the study area is 42.7°C, and the minimum temperature is -5.8°C; the difference between the two is as high as 48.5°C. The average max-imum ground temperature is 72.4°C, and the minimum ground temperature is -5.3°C; the difference between the two is as high as 77.7°C. The average maximum temperature in the study area is 42.7°C, and the minimum temperature is -5.8°C; the difference between the two is as high as 48.5°C. The average maximum ground temperature is 72.4°C, and the minimum ground temperature is -5.3°C; the difference between the two is as high as 77.7°C. This large temperature difference is beneficial to accelerate the physical weathering of the rock mass, especially after the rain and atomized rain infiltrate the slope rock mass, causing a large range of relaxation deformation on the rock mass surface in the study area. There is a waterfall at the junction of the front side slope and the left side slope at the exit of the spillway tunnel, and the rainy season has a large amount of water. In addition, after the spillway is put into use, the two will produce strong atomized rain around the water cushion pond. Atomized rain often forms at the lower part of the slope. Perennial atomized rain will have a serious impact on the slope. The brown-yellow rusting phenomenon appears locally on the slope surface, which is caused by the Fe ions in the unevenly distributed pyrite in the rock layer near the unconformity  3 Geofluids contact surface in the dam site, which oozes with water after oxidation and stains the concrete on the slope surface.

Engineering Geological
Defects. The primary engineering geological defects revealed during the excavation of the slope include blocks, the fracture of the slope, the Huashangou fault (F 6 ), and the poor quality of the rock mass.
2.4.1. Block. A total of 213 blocks was found on the surface of the slope. There were 153 blocks with a volume of less than 100 m 3 , 54 blocks with a volume between 100 m 3 and 1000 m 3 , and six blocks with a volume between 1000 m 3 and 10000 m 3 , which accounted for 71.9%, 25.3%, and 2.8%, respectively. The maximum bulk volume was about 4691 m 3 . Among them, there were 12 stable blocks, 187 blocks with poor stability, and 14 blocks with the worst stability. The buried depth varied about from 2 m to 5 m, and the deepest was block found at about 29 m.

2.4.2.
Fracture of Slope. The on-site geological investigation showed that the fracture of the slope surface was not developed. The excavation of the engineering slope revealed a strike of cracks at 240°~310°with an angle of 40°~60°. The crack surface was generally straight and rough, mostly with mud and calcium, and only a few was filled with debris and mud. The extension of cracks was about 5~10 m. Only six fractures were longer than 20 m, and the longest was about 37 m. Most fracture surfaces were straight, rough, and mostly closed or slightly stretched, with calcium membrane or mud calcium membrane attached to the surface.

Fault.
Huashangou fault (F 6 ) is a large-scale geological structure of the entire slope. The strike of the fault was E-W, with an inclination angle of 70°-75°and trending SE. It intersects with the river valley at an angle of about 60°. It is a normal fault and cuts through the sedimentary caprock, and the vertical offset is about 420 m. The fault through the slope, the plunge pool, and the tail drain guided the wall foundation. The F 6 was 3~8 m wide, mainly composed of clastic rock. Plasticized mudcracks or debris were found near the fault.

Poor Rock Mass
Quality. The overall quality of the rock mass on the left side of the outlet of the spillway tunnel is poor, mainly grades IV1 to IV2, which are mainly distributed with weakly weathered thin-layered dolomite and limestone ( Figure 4). The structural plane is dominated by layers, with microcracks developed, the layers are mostly straight and rough, filled with muddy calcareous, and the cracks are often attached with muddy calcium film, and the erosion and weathering along the structural plane are intensified.

Deformation Monitoring Results
The fault F 6 runs through the entire slope, and the rock mass of the fault fracture zone is very poor. At the same time, the slope has a series of isolated blocks and surface cracks. The existence of these geological defects seriously affects the stability of the slope. Moreover, frequent excavation disturbances cause severe unloading and relaxation of the slope, which leads to the extension and expansion of surface cracks into the rock mass. These geological defects and newly created fissures in the relaxation area will provide convenient conditions for the infiltration of rainwater and atomized rain, thereby increasing the effect of hydrostatic pressure in the fissure on the rock mass, accelerating the physical and chemical action of water on the rock mass structural plane, leading to the overall decline in rock mass quality, and ultimately leading to the deformation of the slope. Therefore, it was chosen as the main monitoring area for the slope project.   TP12  TP13 TP10  TP11  TP09  TP08   TP14   TP07  TP01   TP02   TP03   TP05   TP06   TP04 M11 M12 Figure 5: Distribution map of deformation monitoring points on the slope.

Monitoring Results of Multipoint Displacement Meter.
Seventeen sets of multipoint displacement meters, numbered M01~M17, were arranged on the slope. They were all placed at the downstream of F 6 and divided into two monitoring areas according to the structural characteristics of the slope. Among them, 11 sets were arranged between F 6 and the rear edge slope of the concrete system of 850 m elevation. Six sets were placed at the rear edge slope of the concrete system with an elevation of 850 m. The monitoring depth was about 30 m. Figure 5 shows the layout location. The monitoring time of each multipoint displacement meter is different, and the earliest time is May 5, 2013. Due to factors such as instrument failure and on-site environment, some data are missing. The whole process monitoring curve of the cumulative displacement of the multipoint displacement meter and the orifice is shown in Figure 6 and Table 1.
According to the analysis of the monitoring data in Table 1 and Figure 6, as of August 10, 2017, the cumulative deformation of the orifices of 13 multipoint displacement meters is less than 25 mm, accounting for 76.5% of all monitoring points. The deformation of one monitoring point is 38.86 mm, and that of three monitoring points is above 71 mm. Among them, the monitoring point with the most considerable deformation is M11, at 986.8 m elevation, and the deformation is 92.15 mm. The parts with large local deformation monitored by multipoint displacement meter are mainly located at section 4-4 ′ of the slope, that is, 920~990 m high near the ridge-shaped terrain, and close to the fault F 6 . This data suggests that the slope unloading disturbance and fault structure affect the area significantly. The parts with small deformation monitored by the multipoint displacement meter are located near sections 2-2 and 3-3. That means they are at the trailing edge slope of 850 m elevation concrete system, suggesting a lighter effect of the excavation of the project on this part of the slope. Figure 6 and Table 1, among the 17 multipoint displacement meters, except for M11 and M03, the multipoint displacement meters at these two monitoring points show that there is still a large deformation at a depth of 30 m horizontally (note that the deformation at the monitoring depth of 30 m at both points is more significant than that at 20 m, which are abnormal data). The data from the remaining 15 sensors prove that the slope rock mass at the distance of 30 m from the slope surface does not deform or deforms very little. Therefore, the excavation disturbance at the left side slope at the outlet of the spillway tunnel deforms the rock mass for a depth of about 20~30 m.

Deformation Rate.
The deformation rate of the slope rock mass can be divided into three stages, namely, deformation intensification stage, deformation slowdown stage, and deformation convergence stage ( Figure 6).
The first stage is the deformation intensification stage. The deformation process of monitoring curves recorded by monitoring points M13, M14, and M16 reveals that the deformation aggravation occurs between December 24, 2016, and March 25, 2017. This period corresponds to the start and stops of blasting excavation of the slope below 830 m. The second stage is the deformation slowdown stage that happened after the site stopped blasting excavation on March 25, 2017. The third stage is the deformation convergence stage. Among the 17 multipoint displacement meters, 13 Figure 6: Relationship between the deformation of the multipoint displacement meter and the excavation process. On June 24, 2017, after the plunge pool was filled with water, the deformation rate of the slope was temporarily unchanged. In summary, after stopping the blasting excavation, all the deformation monitoring data of multipoint displacement meters tend to converge.

Apparent Deformation Monitoring
Results. The 14 apparent deformation monitoring piers TP01~TP14 were all arranged downstream the fault F 6 . Eleven piers were arranged between the fault F 6 and the rear edge slope of the concrete system at 850 m elevation; three were on the rear edge slope of the concrete system ( Figure 5). Figure 7 compares the monitored total apparent deformation with the development of the excavation process. The horizontal deformation to the downstream of the river is the positive direction of X, and the upstream is the negative direction. The horizontal deformation to the outside of the slope is the positive direction of Y, and the deformation into the slope is the   TP02  TP03  TP04  TP05  TP06  TP07   TP08  TP09  TP10  TP11    3.2.1. Cumulative Deformation. The deformation components of the apparent monitoring piers suggest that almost all the deformations in the river direction point to the upstream, and the cumulative deformation in this direction is the smallest, i.e., 8 to 23 mm. Moreover, the monitoring point with the most significant cumulative deformation of 54.63 mm is TP03, located at 868 m elevation. The cumulative deformation of all monitoring points to the outside of the slope is generally between 50 and 140 mm. The monitoring point with the most considerable cumulative deformation of 223.75 mm is TP08 at 987 m elevation. The monitoring points with large cumulative deformation after the excavation of the entire slope are higher than 980 m, i.e., they are located in the local ridge-like terrain of the slope. Excavation and unloading affect these monitoring points significantly.
The cumulative vertical deformation of most monitoring points is between 14 and 80 mm; the monitoring point with the most substantial deformation (TP08) is at 987 m elevation; and the cumulative deformation is 214.5 mm. There are two monitoring points with a deformation greater than 100 mm, all of which are located above 980 m elevation. According to the apparent monitoring of the cumulative deformation component characteristics, the deformation of the monitoring area mainly points to the outside of the slope and the upstream of the river.

Total Deformation.
The total deformation represents the actual deformation distance of the apparent monitoring points. According to Table 2, as of August 8, 2017, the cumulative total deformation of three monitoring points (TP08, TP09, and TP13) is more significant than 200 mm. The TP08 monitoring point has the most considerable deformation (312.45 mm), and the cumulative total deformation of two monitoring points (TP07 and TP12) is 200~150 mm. These five monitoring points are mainly distributed in the ridge-like terrain at the top of the slope, which is greatly affected by excavation disturbance and rainfall infiltration. In summary, since December 24, 2016, with the blasting excavation of the slope below 830 m, all monitored apparent deformation components and total deformations increase sharply, and the deformation rate is accelerated. The deformation generated at this stage accounts for 80% of the total deformation. After March 25, 2017, the deformation rate decreases significantly with the completion of the excavation, and as of August 8, 2017, eight out of the 14 apparent monitoring points converge, and the deformation rate of six points significantly reduces and tends to converge.

Anchor Stress Monitoring
Results. Twenty-six sets of anchor stress meters, numbered R01~R26, were all arranged at the downstream of fault F 6 . Eighteen sets were placed between fault F 6 and the rear edge slope of the concrete 13 Figure 8: Comparison curve between the stress change of anchor stress meter and the excavation process. 9 Geofluids system at 850 m elevation, and eight sets were at the rear edge slope ( Figure 5). Figure 8 shows the monitoring results of all anchor stress meters, as summarized in Table 3. According to the data analysis, as of August 10, 2017, three monitoring points exceed 150 MPa, and the monitoring point R23 of 849 m elevation detects the most significant stress change, i.e., an increase of 283.6 MPa. The measured stress of five anchors is within 150~30 MPa, while the variation of the remaining sensors is less than 30 MPa.
According to the stress change curve analysis of all anchor stress meters, the stress change rate of each anchor stress meter increases sharply after blasting excavation of the slope below 830 m elevation on December 24, 2016. After March 25, 2017, with the blasting excavation stopped, except for the R16 anchor stress whose growth rate is still high, the stress growth rate is significantly reduced. As of August 10, 2017, 23 anchor stress monitoring curves have converged, and the stress growth rate of two anchors has reduced significantly and tends to converge. Only one set of R16 anchors at 829 m elevation remains at a higher stress growth rate.
To sum up, data from multipoint displacement meters, apparent deformation of the slope, and anchor stress meters showed that the deformation amount and deformation rate of the slope keep relatively large from July 2016 to March 2017. It is the result of the combined effect of high-strength blasting excavation and long-term rainwater infiltration of the slope rock mass in the rainy season. The maximum deformation occurs at the 4-4 ′ monitoring section, i.e., the protruding ridge topography, followed by the middle area of the slope, and the accumulated deformation amount of the slope behind the concrete system at 850 m elevation and other areas of the slope is small. At present, the slope deformation of the slope is at the stage of convergence. However, in the subsequent slope engineering, especially after the spillway is put into use, strong water impact and atomized rain infiltration will have a serious impact on the stability of the slope, so continuous monitoring is still required to ensure the stability of the slope.

Deformation Mechanism
4.1. The Poor Quality of Lithology. The upper cover of the engineering slope is a gently inclined thin layer of dolomite and thick layer dolomite with shale interlayer. The middle and lower part is a transverse thin layer of limestone and dolomite; the rock mass is poor. The fault F 6 , which is an antidip rock mass structure, runs through the entire slope 10 Geofluids and steeply dip direction into the slope, intersecting the slope at a large angle. The fault F 6 divides the slope into two parts that form the weak boundary of the lower slope of the fault, which weakens the three-dimensional side restraining effect of the front slope of the flood discharge tunnel on the entire left slope. At the same time, due to the deformation of the downstream slope of fault F 6 , the fault and the lower rock mass squeeze under the action of the self-compression of the weak part of the fault and the deformation slip to the outer side of the slope. Due to the long construction period and the large annual temperature difference in the study area, the rock mass will inevitably be subjected to weathering, which will change the lithology of the slope surface rock mass, reduce the quality of the rock mass, and increase the permeability. The degree of weathering decreases with the depth of the slope, and the depth of weathering varies with the quality of the rock mass, which results in the heterogeneity of the seepage of the slope rock mass.

Disturbance of Engineering Activities.
Although the engineering slope is a high-steep slope, before the excavation, the slope rock mass is in a relatively stable state. The excavation of the project redistributes the stress inside the rock mass.
With the gradual expansion of the slope excavation, the rock mass on the slope is subjected to blasting dynamics to generate dynamic damage. On the other hand, the excavation changes the boundary conditions of the slope, and the rock mass undergoes unloading deformation. Part of the strain energy in the rock mass is released, and part of the strain energy is transferred to the deep part of the rock mass, resulting in stress redistribution. Moreover, the deformation of the slope body accompanies the redistribution causing the original structural plane in the rock mass to open and stagger, the expansion of the original joint fissure, or the generation of new cracks, especially in the vicinity of geological weak planes such as faults, soft rock areas, and strong unloading relaxation areas. The combination of new cracks and fault fracture zones generated in the unloading relaxation zone provides convenient conditions for rock mass seepage, and the slope rock mass seepage will vary with the degree of unloading (Figure 9).

Impact of Rainfall and Atomized
Rain. The overall lithology of the slope, coupled with the slope rock mass stress relaxation and deep rock mass cracks caused by engineering disturbance and stress redistribution, provides convenient conditions for rainwater infiltration. Rain infiltrates along the cracks on the slope surface, weakening the mechanical properties of rock and soil. With the continuous heavy rainfall in the rainy season, seepage is formed in the rock mass above the depth of rainfall infiltration, and saturated runoff is formed on the surface of the slope. The infiltration of rainfall and atomized rain water forms a saturated zone that is detrimental to stability and unfavorable in the rock mass of the slope. Although the current saturation zone is not deep, it still causes the water level of the infiltration line on the surface of the slope to change. Especially the atomized rain produced by the waterfall is closer to the fault F 6 , the permeability of the fault fracture zone is stronger, and the overall quality of the slope rock mass is poor. The infiltration of rainwater increases the pore water pressure on the rock mass and reduces the effective stress, and the rock mass and rock mass structural surface are softened by the influence of groundwater. The mechanical properties of rock masses and structural planes change, which will have a very adverse effect on the slope stability. In summary, due to the influence of stratum lithology, excavation disturbance, rainfall, and atomized rain infiltration, part of the apparent monitoring data of the slope surface suddenly increased from November 2016. As of the end of March 2017, the excavation above 806 m elevation was completed. The apparent monitoring data reveal that the deformation rate of the slope is still relatively fast, and the conventional monitoring bolt is subjected to a large force. In order to control the continuous large deformation of the slope, the excavation of the lower part of the slope was stopped on April 1, 2017. The excavated slope was systematically supported in time, and then the deformation rate of the slope slowed down. After filling the plunge pool with water on June 22, 2017, the excavation and support works of the slope were completely stopped. On October 26, 2017, the plunge pool was pumped after the flood season, and the excavation construction of the slope below 806 m fully started. Given the large deformation of the slope caused by the excavation between the 850 and 806 m elevation and considering the impact of strong atomized rain after the normal use of the spillway tunnel, flood discharge impact and atomized rain infiltration will be the most important factors affecting slope stability. In order to better understand the slope deformation law and avoid large deformation caused by the excavation of elevation below 806 m and to guarantee the safety and stability of the slope and integrate monitoring, early warning, reinforcement, and control, it is urgent to establish an early warning criterion and early warning mode suitable for the landslide monitoring of Wudongde Hydropower Station.

New Technology for Preventing and Monitoring the Slope Deformation
Although the left side high slope of the Wudongde flood discharge tunnel does not currently form a sliding surface, the  Figure 9: Deformation-failure evolution process of slope. 11 Geofluids excavation inevitably changes the stress distribution inside the slope body. At the same time, the deformation evolution of the slope is an irreversible process of the development of microfracture inside the rock mass, the weakening of the macromechanical characteristics of the rock mass, and the formation, development, and penetration of the sliding surface. Moreover, these new cracks caused by the construction of slope engineering will facilitate the infiltration of rainfall, especially the intense atomization rain caused by flood discharge. This will also be the most important factor affecting the stability of the hydropower station. At present, because the conventional anchor cable is easy to break during the process of slope deformation, the evolution law of the sliding force inside the slope is difficult to monitor. It is challenging to meet the requirements of landslide monitoring only by shallow displacement and deformation monitoring. Moreover, the conventional monitoring equipment on the slope surface is susceptible to failure due to the effects of strong atomizing rain. Therefore, it is necessary to consider the remote monitoring and early warning system of the slope anchor force developed by the State Key Laboratory of Geotechnical Mechanics and Underground Engineering of China University of Mining and Technology (Beijing) for real-time remote intelligent monitoring of the left side slope of Wudongde flood discharge tunnel.

Landslide Remote Monitoring and Early Warning System.
Based on the monitoring principle of anchor cable force and the working principle of constant resistance large deformation anchor cable, Professor He Manchao developed a landslide monitoring and early warning system based on anchor cable force measurement [39]. The system is based on the principle that "sliding force greater than shear strength is a sufficient and necessary condition for landslide generation." The indirect measurement of the sliding force on the potential sliding surface is achieved by directly measuring and monitoring the axial force on the cable, thus breaking the bottleneck of traditional deformation monitoring. Also, the monitoring and early warning of the deep anchor cable force is realized for the first time.

Principle of Anchor Cable Force Remote Monitoring.
The landslide will only occur if the sliding force is greater than the antisliding force. By considering the mechanical system of a natural landslide, three main forces are acting on it, i.e., sliding force (T 1 ), antisliding force (T 2 ), and self-weight of sliding mass (G). In the natural state, the sliding force and antisliding force on the sliding surface are in equilibrium, i.e., T 1 ≤ T 2 , and the slope is stable. However, when the external or internal factors affecting the slope stability change, the original equilibrium state breaks, and the stress in the landslide body redistributes. When T 1 > T 2 , the slope is unstable. Therefore, it is only necessary to accurately measure T 1 and T 2 to judge the changing state of stress in the landslide body and predict the occurrence time and scale of landslide disaster in advance. In order to measure T 1 and T 2 , the magnitude of sliding force T 1 can be indirectly calculated through direct monitoring of disturbing force P after the artificial measurable force P is introduced. Figure 10 shows the complex mechanical system composed of the natural mechanical system and an artificial mechanical system.    Figure 10: Schematic diagram of landslide measurable mechanical system. 12 Geofluids resistance sleeve, pallet, and nut ( Figure 11). The constant resistance body and the constant resistance sleeve together form a constant resistance device to provide constant support resistance for the anchor cable. When landslide occurs, with the slow release of deformation energy in the slope rock mass, the sliding body and sliding bed move relatively along the sliding surface. When the deformation energy of the rock mass exceeds the designed constant resistance, the constant resistance body frictionally slides along the inner wall of the constant resistance sleeve. The CRLD anchor cable stretches axially along with the large deformation of the slope rock mass and absorbs the energy generated by the slow landslide deformation ( Figure 12). It avoids the failure of conventional monitoring anchor cable due to excessive deformation, meeting the targets of advanced monitoring and early warning for the landslide.

Structure of the Landslide Remote Monitoring and Early
Warning System. The landslide remote monitoring and early warning system consists of indoor and on-site equipment. The indoor monitoring equipment includes a data receiving-processing-analysis system, 3S maps of monitoring point target areas, a 3D monitoring engineering image search system, and some auxiliary analysis software. The on-site monitoring equipment consists of BeiDou satellite receiving equipment, data processing system, and information display system. Figure 13 shows the schematics of the system's working principle.

Landslide
Monitoring and Warning Criteria. In order to improve the monitoring accuracy, this study establishes a landslide monitoring and early warning model. The model mainly relies on system equations and empirical equations. Through statistical analysis of the monitoring data of 354 existing monitoring systems in the past ten years and the results of indoor physical model experiments, a landslide four-level early warning mode is established. The model classifies the degree of hazard of the slope into four levels described by different colors, i.e., red (imminent slip early warning), orange (near slip early warning), yellow (metastable early warning), and blue (stable). Table 4 summarizes the specific grades and early warning criteria.

Monitoring Point Layout.
Taking full account of the slope deformation trend, topography, rock lithology, geological structure, spatial distribution of the fracture, excavation method, and schedule combined with the technical requirements of slope anchor cable force monitoring. A total of 15 monitoring points (NS1~NS15) were arranged within the scope of the engineering slope. The distribution of monitoring points is shown in Figure 14.

Monitoring
Results and Analysis. From April 25, 2018, to October 18, 2018, eight sets of remote monitoring and early warning systems have been installed on the left side slope of the flood discharge tunnel, and the high slope has been continuously monitored for 24 hours. At present, about 14,000 series of data have been collected (Figure 15), which provides important data for monitoring the deformation and evolution characteristics of slopes and early warning.
Through the analysis of the monitoring curve and monitoring data that have been received so far, 75% of the monitoring curve is in a horizontal state or an approximate horizontal state, indicating that the slope is in a stable state. Also, the NS1 monitoring curve contains some unstable data, while the NS2 curve has a slow downward trend, indicating that the top slope is currently in a relatively stable state.
From a macroperspective, as the slope project is nearing completion, most of the slopes are in a stable state. However, as the spillway tunnel is put into use, the strong water impact and the infiltration of atomized rain generated by the flood discharge will have a long-term and continuous impact on the stability of the slope. Therefore, long-term real-time monitoring of slope stability is still needed. Impending slide >160 Anchor force T = T n − T 0 ; sliding force increment ΔT = T n − T n−1 ; initial prestress T 0 = 30t.

Conclusions
Based on the above analysis, a few conclusions can be drawn: (1) The data from multipoint displacement meters, the apparent deformation, and the anchor stress meters all show that the deformation amount and deformation rate of the slope are relatively large during the construction of the slope. It is the result of the combined effect of high-strength blasting excavation and long-term rainwater infiltration of the slope rock mass in the rainy season. The maximum deformation amount is located at the 4-4 ′ deformation monitoring section, especially near the top of the opening line at this section, followed by the middle area of the slope (2) Through comprehensive analysis, the main reason for the large deformation of the slope is that after the excavation of the slope, the slope rock mass will inevitably be affected by weathering and unloading. In addition, the overall quality of the slope rock mass is poor. Weathering changes the lithology of the rock mass on the surface of the slope, reducing the quality of the rock mass and enhancing the permeability. The degree of weathering decreases with the depth of the slope, and the depth of weathering varies according to the quality of the rock mass. The unloading relaxation of rock mass changes the original stress field of the slope, and different unloading degrees cause the cracks in the slope rock mass to open, slip, and expand to different degrees. Rock mass seepage is closely related to rock mass fissures. The degree of unloading decreases with the depth of the slope, and the degree of unloading varies with the quality of the rock mass, resulting in heterogeneity of the seepage of the slope rock mass (3) The newly created cracks and fault fracture zones in the weathering and unloading relaxation zone provide convenient conditions for rainfall and atomized rain infiltration. Rainfall and atomized rainwater infiltrate along the slope surface, forming a seepage field in the slope body, especially in areas with poor rock quality, such as near the fault fracture zone and the top ridged terrain area of the slope. The long-term infiltration of rainwater weakens the rock mass parameters, weakens the strength of the rock mass structural surface, increases the water pressure in the fissures, and causes large deformation of the slope (4) The impact of water flow and the infiltration of atomized rain caused by flood discharge will be the most important factors affecting the stability of this slope in the future. Therefore, the landslide anchor cable force remote monitoring system based on the constant resistance and large deformation anchor cable is used to monitor the stability of the slope. The