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Part 9 RECOGNITION FEATURES of EARTHFLOWS
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Topographic Expression of Earthflows
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Earthflows are statistically the most common form of landslippage They tend to form in the axes of colluvial-filled ravines or areas of thick residual soils One flow tends to pile upon upon another, building large “debris fans”
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Diagnostic Topographic Patterns Use drainage and topographic keys to recognize anomalous site characteristics typical of landslides Divergent contours Crenulated contours Arcuate headscarp evacuation areas Isolated topographic benches
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Topographic Keys to Identify Earthflows Opposing contours Headscarp evacuation areas Necking down at transition between deflation/ inflation zones
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Earthflow features become increasingly mollified with the passage of time, making them difficult to discern 10 to 100 years old100 to 500 years old More than 500 years old
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Earthflows tend to form coalescing complexes, with one or two lobes active at any given time, separated by long periods of dormancy
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As earthflows become less frequent their areal limits become increasingly sketchyAs earthflows become less frequent their areal limits become increasingly sketchy
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PROFILES of COALESCING EARTHFLOWS Each successive earthflow tends to truncate and mask the previous event
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Examples of earthflows in the Appalachian Highlands mapped by the USGS
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Crowley’s Ridge Earthflows
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