Mass Wasting Chapter 9 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 11
About This Presentation
Title:

Mass Wasting Chapter 9

Description:

Rock, mud, regolith, other debris can all be part of the mass ... Involves soil and regolith w/ lots of water. Mudflows characteristic of semiarid regions ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:115
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 12
Provided by: mscc6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Mass Wasting Chapter 9


1
Mass Wasting Chapter 9
2
Chapter 9 Objectives
  • 1. Types of mass wasting and speed of movement
  • 2. Effects of mass wasting
  • 3. Potential causes and what triggers the
    release of debris

3
Mass Wasting
  • Mass Wasting the downslope movement of rock,
    regolith, and soil under the direct influence of
    gravity.
  • The Role of Mass Wasting
  • Its the step that follows weathering.
  • Weakens rock
  • Mass wasting
  • Stream transportation
  • Ends up in the Sea
  • Slopes change through time
  • Earth is heading toward flat land. Thank
    goodness for Plate Tectonics.

4
Controls and Trigger
  • Gravity is the controlling force of mass wasting.
  • Its a series of processes that begin to weaken
    the rock.
  • The pull of gravity
  • Passes the threshold of stability
  • TRIGGER last of the problem
  • Saturation of material w/ water
  • Oversteepening slopes
  • Removal of vegetation
  • earthquakes

5
Triggers
  • Role of Water
  • Cohesion holds water
  • Saturation - lets it slide(when saturated)lowers
    internal resistance
  • Clay becomes slick
  • Oversteepened Slopes - Angle of Repose 25 to 40
    degrees
  • Streams undercutting a valley
  • Waves action
  • Removal of Vegetation
  • Root system, cuts impact of raindrops
  • Removed by fire, people(timber,development)
  • Fireerosion, bake the ground(slows penetration)

6
More Triggers
  • Earthquakes as Triggers movement
  • Earthquakes and aftershock
  • Liquification water saturated soils
  • Landslides w/o Triggers
  • Gradual weakening over time
  • Other materials that fall on their own

7
Classification of Mass Wasting Processes
  • Type of Material
  • Rock, mud, regolith, other debris can all be
    part of the mass
  • Type of Motion the way the material moves
  • http//www.indiana.edu/geol116/week10/wk10.htm
  • Fall
  • Slide
  • Slump
  • Flow
  • Rate of Movement
  • Can move at high rates of speed (160 mph) and
    everything down to 1 centimeter/year
  • Some can move fast enough to produce shock and
    wind waves

8
Types of Mass Wasting
  • Slump
  • Downward movement as a unit along curved surface
  • Usually in a thick cohesive material
  • Water percolates downward
  • Causes can be oversteepening
  • Anchor material is removed at the base
  • Too much weight at the top
  • Undercut by a river
  • Rockslide
  • Large blocks of bedrock break loose
  • Usually large amounts of unconsolidated
    debris(rock slide)
  • Faster and most destructed
  • Can be trigged by snow and rain (spring)

9
Types of Mass Wasting
  • Debris Flow
  • Involves soil and regolith w/ lots of water
  • Mudflows characteristic of semiarid regions
  • Lahars mostly volcanic material and water(like
    wet cement)
  • Triggered by rapid snow melt or heavy rain
  • Common on stratovolcanos
  • Earthflow
  • Common of hillsides in humid areas and heavy
    precip.
  • Most materials are clay and silt and very
    viscous(slower)
  • They can last for days to years and move as
    little as a few mm/yr

10
Types of Mass Wasting
  • Slow Movements cover a wider area than other
    mass wasting
  • Creep gradual movement. Mainly due to freezing
    and thawing or wetting and drying gravity.
  • Solification saturated soil(soggy)
  • Can be promoted by layer of hardpan or permafrost
  • Solification occurs in the active layer flows
    easily
  • Submarine Landslides same as above ground
  • Hawaii along continental slopes due to active
    volcanoes
  • Many are larger than anything seen on land
  • Biggest can be around Seamounts
  • These landslides can have an impact on continents
    by growing the margins of the continents.

11
Ways to Avoid Disaster
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com