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Mass wastingThe downslope movement of rock, regolith, soil, etc. under the direct influence of gravityDoes not require a transporting medium (water, air, ice). Plays a role in developing landforms (surface features)Weathering, by itself, doesn't produce significant landformsLandforms are devel
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1. Chapter 15Mass Wasting
2.
Mass wasting
The downslope movement of rock, regolith, soil, etc. under the direct influence of gravity
Does not require a transporting medium (water, air, ice)
3. Plays a role in developing landforms (surface features)
Weathering, by itself, doesnt produce significant landforms
Landforms are developed as weathering products are removed from their original place
5. Weathering weakens & breaks rock apart
Mass wasting transports the debris downslope
Generally to a stream, which carries material away
This material may then be deposited anywhere downstream
Ultimate destination the ocean
6. For mass wasting to occur, need slopes
that is, differences in elevation
Most rapid mass wasting occurs in rugged, geologically-young mountains
as mtn building subsides, mass wasting & erosion lowers the land
leads to a gentler terrain
7. Causes of mass wasting
Water
Slope
Vegetation
Other triggers
8. Waters role
a major trigger
heavy rains or snowmelt saturate surface materials
pores in sediment fill w/water, reducing cohesion between particles
particles can then slide apart easily
(ex.: use slightly wet sand to make a sand castle. Add more water to the sand, what happens?)
10. Clay
A dry clay is fairly rigid
Wet clay is very slick
Water also adds mass (weight), and helps to start movement of material downslope
11. Effects of slope
If slope is too steep, material will move (oversteepening)
Examples:
Stream undercutting a valley wall
Waves pounding against a cliff
Human activity (that is, stupidity)
12. Angle of repose
A characteristic of unconsolidated, granular materials (sand size or larger)
The steepest angle where a pile of the material is stable
Generally 25 40ş from horizontal
Larger, more angular fragments form the steepest slopes
13. Vegetation
Root systems bind soil materials together
Plants also shield underlying materials from erosional effects of raindrops
More important when the vegetation removed
Build a house on a scenic hillside, remove the natural vegetation so you have a view & a normal house wait for a few heavy rains
Wildfires (or clear-cutting)
Removes vegetation
Land exposed for erosion
14. Other triggers
Earthquakes can dislodge rock & unconsolidated materials that were semi-stable
Liquefaction shaking during EQ causes water-saturated sediments to lose strength & behave as a fluid
Some movements occur without any obvious trigger
15. Mass Wasting Processes 4 main processes
Slump
Rockslide
Debris flow
Earthflow
16. These classes based on:
Type of material
Kind of motion
Rate of motion
17. Type of material
Unconsolidated or bedrock
Type of motion
Fall, slide, or flow
18. Fall:
The freefall of detached, individual pieces (of any size)
Watch for falling rock
21. Slide
The material remains fairly coherent
Moves along a well-defined surface
This surface may be parallel to the slope, or curved
Landslide geologically, no definition. Yet, we all use the term to describe much mass wasting.
22. Flow
Material moves downslope as a thick fluid
Material almost always saturated w/water
23. Rate of movement
Most movement is quite slow (more in a bit)
Very rapid movement generally asso. with rock avalanches
Speeds >125 mph
As best we can tell, air becomes entrapped beneath a mass of debris, creating a rock hovercraft
24. Slumps
Downward sliding of a mass of rock/ unconsolidated material along a curved surface
Material generally doesnt move very fast or travel very far
Often happens in multiple blocks
26. Slumps often the result of oversteepening of a slope
Examples (again)
Valley wall cut by river
Waves
Overloading a slope (material deposited on top, humans build on edge of a slope)
29. Rockslide
Blocks of bedrock break loose, slide downslope
If material relatively unconsolidated, called a debris slide
These tend to be the fastest & most destructive movements
In areas where rock strata are inclined, or has joints/fractures parallel to the slope
32. Debris flow
Involves the flow of soil/regolith containing large amounts of water
Also called mudflows
Generally seen in semiarid mountainous regions, and slopes of some volcanoes
Flows often follow existing canyons & stream channels
34. Flows in semi-arid areas
Heavy rain or rapid snowmelt results in sudden floods
Large amounts of soil, etc., washed into nearby streams
Rate of flow depends on area slopes & water content of material
If flow dense enough, can carry or push large boulders, trees, houses
35. Lahars
A type of debris flow defined as having 40% or more by weight of volcanic debris
Mostly volcanic materials on the flanks of volcanoes
May occur during eruption or when volcano quiet
Unconsolidated layers of ash & debris become water saturated & flow downslope
Caused by heavy rains, or melting of snow/ice as a result of pre-eruption heatflow
36. Earthflow
Generally occurs on hillsides in humid areas as a result of heavy precipitation or snowmelt
Material involved often rich in clay/silt-sized particles
Movement generally slow (up to several meters per day)
And, this isnt the slowest movement
38. Creep
The slowest of the movements
The gradual downhill movement of soil/regolith
Often results from the alternate expansion/contraction of surficial materials by freeze/thaw cycles or wet/dry periods
40. Other causes of creep:
Impact of raindrops
Disturbance of material by plant roots and/or burrowing critters
Saturation of ground with water (that pesky fluid again!)
41. Creep is a very slow process
We cant sit there and observe it happening (unless you have little else to do)
We can see the effects of it, after a bit of time
46. Some other ideas Solifluction
The down-slope flow of water-saturated soil
Occurs where water cant escape from a saturated surface layer
Usually due to an underlying dense clay layer or an impermeable rock layer
47. Geologic dictionary defines this as occurring in high elevations in regions underlain by frozen ground, which acts as a downward barrier to water movement
Rate of movement 0.5 to 15 cm/yr
48. Permafrost
A layer of unconsolidated material containing water which is frozen
May be 30 cm to over 1000 m thick (1 to 3000 ft)
When surface thaws (for whatever reason), water cannot seep down due to frozen material deeper down
Surface becomes a mushy muck
51. Upper, thawed layer can slowly flow
Alaska pipeline
A few years back
Pipeline from the North Slope to the coast
Oil needs to be warm to flow
The pipeline would wreck havoc to Alaskas permafrost area, not to mention the wildlife (oh, thats biology or environmental science)
55. Mass wasting also occurs below the ocean surface
These just arent seen as much
Slides
Along flanks of volcanic islands & seamounts
Along continental margins, especially near deltas
Contribute to tsunamis
56. A final thought on mass wasting
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