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mass wasting. 11:37 am on August 17, 1959. magnitude 7.1? earthquake West Yellowstone, Montana. produced waves in Hebgen Lake that swept over dam. triggered landslide of 85 million tons of rock. sped downslope at 150 km/hr and produced hurricane force winds. • cars blown into air
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11:37 am on August 17, 1959 magnitude 7.1? earthquake West Yellowstone, Montana produced waves in Hebgen Lake that swept over dam triggered landslide of 85 million tons of rock sped downslope at 150 km/hr and produced hurricane force winds • cars blown into air • valley floor covered by 45 m of rubble • 28 people (campers) were killed Madison Canyon slide
mass movements occur everywhere… …estimate damage annually in US at $1.5 billion… …less than 1,000 deaths of 20,000 lost in natural disasters from 1925-1975 were from mass movements not likely to be killed by mass movements, but likely to pay for effects
classification of mass wasting rate of movement cm/year to 100 km/hour type of material solid bedrock or unconsolidated debris type of movement flow, slide, fall, creep
types of movement slide: mass remains intact (2 types: landslide; slump) flow: viscous fluid fall: free-fall of material
hill gives way in coherent mass --large block moves
(type of slide but with rotation) surface of movement is concave scarp
submarine landslides (Hawaii) landslides on Mars
flows: earthflow move slowly (viscous) 1-2 meter/hour solifluction
earth flows and solifluction
flows: mud flow (mixture of debris and water) may move quickly over gentle slopes (1°-2°)
mud flow at Nevada Huascaran, Peru: killed 18,000 people before
downslope motion for creep freeze/thaw cycle
controlling factors in mass wasting • gravity (friction and slope angle) • large relief • water • slope composition • vegetation
gravity: 2 factors in balance 1) gravity--pulls object to center of Earth • component perpendicular (normal) to surface (contributes to friction) • component parallel (shear) to surface (contributes to sliding) 2) friction--resists block sliding downslope • depends on angle of slope; slipperiness of slope; and magnitude of normal component of gravity
relief: change in elevation greater difference in relief yields greater shear forces along slopes
water: two effects 1) small amounts of water • glues particles by surface tension--”sand castles” 2) excessive amounts of water • reduces friction between surface material and underlying rock • counteracts normal component of gravity …water pushed upward…
slope composition (amount of loose rock) ….solid bedrock, unconsolidated bedrock (loose or weathered material) solid rock very stable even as cliffs…NOT stable if: • has lots of fractures (cracks) • is soluble (limestone) such that cavities form • has layering of “wrong” orientation …bedding (sedimentary rocks) or foliation (metamorphic rocks)
slope composition (continued) ….solid bedrock, unconsolidated bedrock (loose or weathered material) unconsolidated material stability depends on frictional properties… • is highly dependent on water content • is stable until maximum angle …angle of repose…
angle of repose: maximum angle where friction balances gravity
vegetation roots stabilize loose, unconsolidated material …removal (by fire or clear-cutting) leads to mass movement
prevention water, weight of house, road cut