What are the hazards associated with mass movement and slope failure?
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- Created on: 24-05-14 17:19
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- What are the hazards associated with mass movement and slope failure?
- Causes
- Rainfall
- Rock type
- Snow melt
- Lack of vegetation
- Gradient
- Dip of strata
- Water table
- Weathering and erosion
- Temperature
- Human activity
- Load
- Quakes
- Earthmovement
- Volcanic activity
- Types
- Flow
- Top layers of rock slide quicker than bottom layers
- Fast, wet
- Mud flow
- Slide
- All layers move at same speed
- Fast, dry
- Rockfall
- Heave
- Freezing and expanding and then melting dislodges particles
- Solifluction
- Slow, wet
- Flow
- Vajont Dam, 9th October 1963
- The Dam
- 262m tall
- 27m thick at base
- Constructed for HEP purposes
- Upstream geology wasn't taken into account during construction
- Pre-disaster
- A geologist was tasked to do a survey of the area, he found an ancient landslide 100m away from the dam
- Feb 1960- Reservoir filled to 170m deep
- Farmers discovered a 171m crack on slopes above the reservoir, widening by 3cm per day
- Causes
- Chief engineers planned to slowly lower landslide into reservoir by changing level in the reservoir
- Scale models showed a max wave height of 20m
- Landslide accelerated as it got near to falling, even after the water level was dropped
- Slide moving at 30cm per day close to the end
- Usually high rainfall
- Impacts
- Landslip from Monte Toc caused wave 200m high
- 2000 people killed
- 260,000,000 cubic meters of earth fell into reservoir in 45 seconds
- Longarone, Pirago, Rivalta, Villanova and Faè were all destroyed
- The Piave valley was turned into a mudflat
- Human causes
- Model used did not account for 1cm thick bands of clay in Monte Toc
- One of 3 boreholes dug gave readings to suggest a clay layer. These results were assumed to be faulty and ignored
- Slide was though to take minimum of 1min
- The Dam
- Izu-Oshima -Japan
- Landslide influenced by typhoon Wipha
- 16th October 2013
- Heavy rainfall from typhoon (824mm total)
- Slope fall of unstable volcanic ash
- 27 deaths, 22 missing
- Searching
- 283 homes destroyed
- Evacuation
- Causes
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