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US 550, Bondad Hill 2/14/2016.

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Presentation on theme: "US 550, Bondad Hill 2/14/2016."— Presentation transcript:

1 US 550, Bondad Hill 2/14/2016

2 Consider how steep a slope can be and remain stable
Sand dune Angle of repose for dry sand 15.07.b Some parts of slope steeper than angle of repose EXERCISE Can bring in sand to pour in class to demonstrate angle of repose, and then undercut slope NOTES Sand: Morocco Talus: Tibet Scoria: Northern Arizona Scoria cone Talus slope Coarse material can have a steeper angle of repose

3 Factors that control slope stability
Amount of water Angle of repose for material EXPLANATION Loose materials, like soil may have typical angle of repose; solid rock can hold steeper slopes Adding too much water to loose materials can weaken them Rock is weaker if discontinuities are oriented so rocks can slide downhill EXERCISE Draw sketches of hills with different orientations of layers and have students decide which side is least or most safe Discontinuities: fractures, cleavage and bedding 15.07.c

4 Some ways that slopes fail
Earthquake activity Undercut cliff NOTES Undercut cliff: Yampa River, Utah Earthquake: Alaska Steep slope: Tibet Landslide: El Salvador Undercut slope: Pacific Palisades, California Too steep a slope Undercut slope

5 Classification of Slope Failures
Mechanism of Movement Fall Flow Type of Material Solid rock Unconsolidated NOTES Fall: Colorado National Monument, Colorado Flow: La Conchita, California Solid rock: Monument Valley, Arizona Unconsolidated: Grand Canyon Fast: Venezuela debris flows Slow: Slumgullion, Colorado Rate of Movement 15.08.b1 Fast Slow 15.08.b

6 Observe what happens when rocks fall or slide
Rock fall and debris fall Rock slide EXPLANATION Fall: must be a cliff; large blocks below cliff may indicate the potential for fall Rock slide: somewhat intact block at start of movement; typically detaches along bedding plane, fault, or other discontinuity Rotational slide: curved surfaces in either rock or loose materials; also called a slump Rotation tilts layers if present NOTES Rock fall: Eiger, Swiss Alps (hidden behind other photos but shows up first) Rock slide: Naxos, Greece (undercut by highway) Rotational slide: Toreva, Arizona Rotational slide 15.09.a1

7 Observe the types of slope failure that involve flow: Part 1
Creep Debris slide EXPLANATION Creep: slow, continuous movement in weak materials; occurs on most slopes but at different rates Debris slide: Unconsolidated but detaches along some interface Earth flow: weak, with matrix of fine-grained materials; moves like wet concrete; also called mudflow NOTES Debris slide: British Columbia Earth flow: Thunder Mountain, Idaho Earth flow 15.10.a

8 Observe the types of slope failure that involve flow: Part 2
Debris flow Rock or debris avalanche EXPLANATION Debris flow: loose slurries with various sizes of clasts; can move rapidly Rock/debris avalanche: collapse of steep slope followed by high velocity flow; shattered pieces of rock EXERCISE Read aloud great description of debris flow filling house in Control of Nature by John McPhee NOTES Debris flow: Venezuela Rock avalanche: Peru (1970 earthquake shook loose side of mountain; killed 18,000 in one town) 15.10.a

9 Slide Lake, Utah: What kind of movement is this?
Moved 14 ft between 2004 and 2009

10 Egypt New Zealand Japan

11 Landslides and La Conchita
15.10.m 1995 2005 EXPLANATION Coastal California town hit by landslides 1995 and 2005 (and one earlier in 1980’s) Same area or adjacent area with identical setting hit each time Geologists recommend abandoning town

12 Slope Failures in the U.S.
Earth flow - New York Debris avalanche - Alaska Rock slide - Wyoming EXPLANATION Alaska: magnitude 7.9 magnitude earthquake in 2002 unleashed rock and debris avalanches Tully Valley, New York: landslide (earth flow) in 1993 mobilized clays deposited in glacial lake Gros Ventre, Wyoming: tilted beds undercut by river; mountain made noises well before rockslide in 1925 Thistle landslide, Utah: costliest landslide in U.S. history; buried railroad, 2 highways, and town in 1983 15.11.a Landslide - Utah


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