Title: Anatomy of a landslide
1Anatomy of a landslide
2Erosional Phases
- No erosion
- Rapid Erosion
- Slow Erosion
3No erosion
- Can last seconds to decades
- Volume of deposit increases as upstream sediments
are trapped - Debris dams are more likely to form and persist
with large amounts of woody debris
4Rapid erosion
- Incision through sediment occurs during the
development of new channels - Downcutting may be limited by bedrock or coarse
armoring material supplied by landslide - Rough estimate of material moved during this
phase length of channel affected x channel
width x depth of deposit - Phase ends when channel geometry is equilibrated
to upstream water and sediment discharge
5Slow erosion
- Sediment is supplied primarily by bank erosion
- Supply rate is a function of flood occurrence,
channel shifting and the establishment of bank
vegetation
6Significance of landslides
- Sediment input affects riparian habitat
- Infilling of Salmon redds
- Gravel recruitment
- Societal impacts
- Damage to infrastructure
- Potentially lethal
7The 1983 Thistle landslide at Thistle, Utah-This
landslide began moving in the spring of 1983 in
response to groundwater buildup from heavy rains
the previous September and the melting of deep
snowpack for the winter of 1982-83. Within a few
weeks the landslide dammed the Spanish Fork
River, obliterating U.S. Highway 6 and the main
line of the Denver and Rio Grande Western
Railroad. The town of Thistle was inundated under
the floodwaters rising behind the landslide dam.
Total costs (direct and indirect) incurred by
this landslide exceeded 400 million, the most
costly single landslide event in U.S. history.