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Jon Bevan

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We examined an active land along side of the Lee River in Jericho, Vermont. ... 1962 land is almost twice as larger than present scarp. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Jon Bevan


1
The Lee River Landslide
  • Jon Bevan
  • Meghan ODonnell
  • December 10, 2003

2
Introduction and Objectives
  • We examined an active landslide along side of the
    Lee River in Jericho, Vermont.
  • The main slide occurred several years ago and
    recently there have been smaller slides.
  • We wanted to investigate
  • stratigraphy and cohesion of the sediment.
  • vegetative cover on and around the slope.
  • Infer geologic history of the sediment.
  • Conclude why the slope continues to fail.

3
Location Map
N
37 meters in height 50 meters across
Scale 100 km
See Jon for Scale
N
N
Scale 0.5 km
4
Methods
  • Dig eight, 1m deep soil pits vertically up the
    landslide to observe stratigraphy
  • Orientation of bedding,
  • Sediment grain size and graded bedding,
  • Cross-bedding and Ripples.
  • A handheld device to measure cohesion of
    particular sediment layers.
  • Cohesion is the soils ability to stick to itself.

5
The Landslide Data
  • The slope of the landslide is 28.
  • The sediment continually increases in grain size
    with increased elevation, besides Pit 2.
  • Alternating fine to coarse layers.
  • All tilted layers, cross bedding, and ripples are
    oriented northeast.
  • Finer grained sediment was more tightly packed
    and exhibited greatest cohesion.
  • Vegetation covered the southern half of the slide
    was covered with vegetation.

6
Pit 2 Data
Unsorted fine to medium grained sediment, 7
meters from rivers edge
See tape measure for scale
Pockets of gravel within unsorted material
See tape measure for scale
Organic debris
See tape measure for scale
7
Vegetation and Ground Water
Vegetation covers approximately 50 of the slope.
The roots stabilize the slope laterally.
See Jon for scale
Outwash of subsurface groundwater at the base of
the slope.
Scale 6 in.
8
Geologic History
  • 12-13ka the Laurentide Ice mass ablated from this
    region of Vermont.
  • Served as an ice dam for northward flowing water
  • Glacial Lake Vermont
  • Creation of deltas into glacial lake

Note Photo from Benn and Evans, 1998. And please
disregard blank spots.
9
How the Slide has Changed (1962 and 1999)
1962
1999
1962 landslide is almost twice as larger than
present scarp. Vegetation on farmland terrace
has increased significantly.
10
Explanation of why the Slope Fails
  • Slope of the slide is quite steep.
  • Sub-surface flow of H2O
  • Normal force decreases as pore pressure stays the
    same, decreasing cohesion.
  • Undercutting of river
  • Insufficient vegetation to completely stabilize
    the slope.

11
References
  • Wright, Steven. 2002 and 2003. Personal
    Conversations and Class notes.
  • Chapman DH. 1937. Late- and Post-Glacial
    Champlain Valley. In American Journal of
    Science. 3453.
  • Bierman Paul. 2003. Class notes.
  • Benn, D, Evans, D. 1998. Glaciers and
    Glaciation. Arnold Publishers. London, England.
  • Bloom, A. 1991. Geomorphology A Systematic
    Analysis of Late Cenozoic Landforms. Prentice
    Hall. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, USA.
  • Kochel R, Miller J, Ritter D. 1978. Process
    Geomorophology. WCB Publishers. Dubuque, IA.
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