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Published byJosephine Turner Modified over 8 years ago
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Bell Ringer When the landscape changes suddenly, it is considered Mass Movement….. Can you list 5 types of Mass movement? What could potentially cause this to occur?
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Mass Movements/ Wasting
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What are they? Mass movements include: Landslides Rock falls Avalanches Mud flows Debris flows Creep
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Anatomy of a rotational landslide
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<1 cm/year >100 km/year 0%~40%
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Mass Movements Material moves downslope due to the pull of gravity Can happen almost anywhere Commonly associated with other events (heavy rainfall or earthquakes, for example) and are therefore under-reported Movements can either be catastrophic (slope failure) or slow and steady (creep) The rate of the mass movement can be increased by various erosive agents (especially water)
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Gravity Water Earth Materials Triggering Events Factors in Slope Stability
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Gravity & steepening of a slope
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How to cause a landslide: add or subtract a mass …in the wrong place Common when building roads Common when building near slopes
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Rotational landslide
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Angle of Repose Varies for Different Materials
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Water decreases rock/soil cohesion
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Water circulating underground can dissolve cements that hold sedimentary rocks together
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Internal Causes for Slope Failure Water (weight & interaction with clay minerals) Decreasing rock cohesion Incompetent/weak material Adverse geologic structures
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The Weight of Water Sedimentary rocks commonly have porosities of 10 - 30% If pore spaces fill with water, the weight of the material is increased substantially, creating instability
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La Conchita, CA March 1995
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It happened again in 2004… in exactly the same place…
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La Conchita, CA
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Debris flows or mud flows Mass movements that behave like fluids Unlike slides, flows are not controlled by a failure surface, but instead are dominated by internal movements
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Landslides in the Bay Area
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1982 San Mateo County
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Devil’s slide area on Highway 1 north of Half Moon Bay
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Rock Falls
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Creep Downslope movement of soil and uppermost bedrock Creep happens at too slow of a rate to observe directly Instead, creep can be identified by it’s effect on objects
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Gravity - hill slopes more vulnerable (on top of a hill, on the slope, or at the bottom of a hill), modified slopes (road cut, cut flat area to build on, coastal erosion, etc.) Water - risk is higher when ground is saturated and/or during heavy rains, El Niño events Earth Materials - loose soils (particularly clay-rich) or fractured rock, and old landslides pose greater risk Triggering Events - heavy rain during storm, rain after big storms or fires, earthquakes (when ground is saturated?)…are all triggers Risk factors to increase likelihood of mass movement
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