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Mass movement Mudflow
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Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Dec 25, 2015

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Bruce Bryan
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Page 1: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Mass movement

Mudflow

Page 2: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

What is Mudflow?

• Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Page 3: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Description of Mudflow

Flows take place gradually, possibly faster at one time in the year than another

Encouraged by wet winters mudflows emerge from the base of a rotational slip and slowly spread and pour over earlier, lower slips and flows into the sea.

Mudflow can travel extremely fast at more than 10ft/s.

Page 4: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

How does it happen?

• It is often encouraged by heavy rain and happens most often from October to February when the wet conditions lubricate the protective soil and wash away bits of loose ground gradually. Flash floods can often encourage rapid mudflow, this is also known as a lanslide.

Page 5: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Conditions for mudflowMaterials involved:

• A mixture of mud and water

•Soil and rock

Conditions needed:

•Heavy rainfall for long period of time

•Both gravity and slope angle play a part

•Slope angle must be greater than 10°

Vegetation and human factors:

•There are no human factors

•Soil becomes saturated

Page 6: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Easily saturated top soil

Downslope movement of saturated soil lobe

Angle of slope >10°

Input of precipitation increases weight and lubrication of top soil

Toe marks final resting place

Bowl-shaped hollow marking start of flow

Page 7: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Landslides and Slumps

By James Morrison, Only James.

Page 8: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Type of Mass Movement – Landslides and Slumps

Earliest landslide blocks are hummocky because of glacial erosion and deposition

Key

Downward slumping of heavy basalt rock

Concave sliding surface

Large sections of rock and soil break away and move quickly down-slope as a unit

Page 9: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Processes

A landslide is the movement of large quantities of rock and/ or earth.

Landslides are a form of rotational sliding which is when a mass of rock slumps along a curved plane. This causes the land to break away and move downhill as a unit

This process is very fast.

Page 10: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Conditions

Material involved- • Soft rock – Clay• Hard rock – Sandstone• Soft material such as clay overlies a harder

substance such as sandstone.Weather conditions-• Surface soil is saturated after prolonged heavy

rain which lubricates the rock• Slopes are undercut because of river or sea

erosion• Rock becomes weaker and unsupported.

Page 11: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Conditions Continued

Vegetation-

• Prevented by vegetation as the roots as the roots bind the soil.

• Vegetation also protects the soil from heavy rain

Movement-

• The movement is helped by gravity and this process happens quickly

Page 12: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Slumping

This is defined as occasional, rapid movements of large

quantities of soil and/or rock.

Page 13: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

How much slope gives way?

Usually a whole section of a slope gives way when a large amount of unsupported solid rock and/or regolith begins to slip plane.

Regolith – the general name given to the end product of weathering

Page 14: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

MovementThe Slump block moves downhill slowly,

Page 15: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Gravity’s Role

• When the gravitational force acting on a slope exceeds its resisting force, slope failure (mass wasting) occurs.  The resisting forces helping to maintain slope stability include the slope material's strength and cohesion, the amount of internal friction between grains, and any external support of the slope.  These factors collectively define a slope's shear strength.

Page 16: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Gradient

•   Slope gradient is probably the major cause of mass wasting.   Generally speaking, the steeper the slope, the less stable it is.  Therefore, steep slopes are more likely to experience mass wasting than gentle ones.

Page 17: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

WE HAVE GRAFITIED YOUR PRESENTATION!!!!!

LOL

Page 18: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

PROCESS

• Definition

Soil creep is the result of repeated expansion and contraction of particles of soil. Heavy rainfall increases the volume of the soil, therefore, weighs it down which makes the soil move downhill under gravity!

Soil Creep is the slowest and least dramatic of all down slope movements. Speed of less than 1mm/year.

Page 19: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Guide Planes!

Easily saturated top soil!

Page 20: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

CONDITIONS

• Materials involved:

Large sections of rock and soil.

• Weather Conditions

Rain helps lubrication of the rock.

Page 21: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

CONDITIONS CONTINUED

• GRAVITY

The steeper the slope the higher the gravitational force.

The steeper the slope the faster the movement.

CONSEQUENCES

• Tilted trees, damaged walls, Cracked roads

Page 22: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.
Page 23: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Rock fall

By Lorraine , Heather, Kirsten and Kate

Page 24: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Processes

• Rock fall is the rapid, free-fall of rock from a steep cliff face. Rock fragments fall from the face of the cliff because of the action due to gravity. This is made worse by freeze-thaw action loosening the rock. A scree slope of fallen rock is formed at the bottom of the cliff.

Page 25: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Diagram

Lines of weakness

Free FaceScree accumulates at slope foot forming heaps of sharp debris

Rocks bounce down rather than roll

Page 26: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Conditions

• The ground is vertical and dry to help the process of rock fall to take place. The material that is involved is varying sizes of rock.

• Rock fall usually occurs in colder, wetter climates due to freeze thaw action, one of the main processes, works best at these climates

• Bare, hard rock is very vulnerable to rockfall - water enters the joint, freezes and expands, cracking the rock.

• It is common at high altitudes where there is poor soil and less vegetation.

Page 27: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Mass movement

Rock fall

By Luke, Alexander, David and Gary.

Page 28: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Bare rock, scree slopes and freeze thaw weathering are the three main factors in rock fall

mass movement.

Page 29: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Freeze thaw weathering weakens joints and bedding planes in the cliff. The rock that falls off creates a scree slope. The scree

slope has an angle of repose which is around 30 degrees.

The finer grained scree (talus) fills the small holes in the rocks.

Page 30: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

Rockfall mass movement occurs in areas where the temperature is low and

fluctuates around 0 degrees Celsius.

Freeze thaw

Upper part of scree (talus) slope

Page 31: Mass movement Mudflow. What is Mudflow? Mudflow is the movement of top-soil down a gradient in the landscape and happens both gradually and rapidly.

After gravity has pulled the rock from the rock face it falls down the scree slope, at the bottom of the scree slope small plants

grow and hold the rocks together.

Some plants holding the bottom of the scree slope together

Gravity pulls the rock off the rock face after it has been weakened by freeze thaw.