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FLOOD05740
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Last modified
1/25/2010 6:50:04 PM
Creation date
10/5/2006 1:44:00 AM
Metadata
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Template:
Floodplain Documents
County
Denver
Community
All
Stream Name
All
Basin
South Platte
Title
Landslide Loss Reduction
Date
1/1/1989
Prepared For
State of Colorado
Prepared By
CGS
Floodplain - Doc Type
Educational/Technical/Reference Information
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<br /> <br />action brought on by changes in temperature <br />(expansion and shrinkage), the freeze-thaw. <br />. cycle, and the burrowing activity of animals. <br /> <br />Earthquakes <br />Earthquakes not only trigger landslides, but, <br />over time, the tectonic activity causing them can <br />create steep and potentially unstable slopes. <br /> <br />Rapid sedimentation <br />Rivers supply very large amounts of sediment <br />to deltas in lakes and coastal areas. The rapid- <br />ly deposited sediments are frequently under- <br />consolidated, and have excess pore-water <br />pressures and low strengths. Such deltaic <br />sediments are often prone to underwater <br />delta-front landsliding, especially where the <br />sediments are rich in clay and/or contain gas <br />from organic decomposition. <br /> <br />Wind-generated waves <br />Storm waves in coastal areas are known to <br />trigger underwater landsliding in deltas by <br />cyclically loading weak bottom sediments. <br /> <br />Tidal or river drawdown <br />Rapid lowering of water level in coastal areas <br />or along river banks due to tides or river dis- <br />charge fluctuations can cause underwater land- <br />sliding. The process in which weak river bank <br />or deltaic sediments are left unsupported as <br />the water level drops is known as "drawdown." <br /> <br />Types of Landslides <br />The most common types of landslides are des- <br />cribed below. These definitions are based <br />mainly on the work ofVames (1978). <br /> <br />Falls <br />Falls are abrupt movements of masses of <br />geologic materials that become detached from <br />steep slopes or cliffs (Figures 8a, b). Movement <br />occurs by free-fall, bouncing, and rolling. De- <br />pending on the type of earth materials invol- <br />ved, the result is a rockfall, soilfall, debris fall, <br />earth fall, boulder fall, and so on. All types of <br />falls are promoted by undercutting, differential <br />weathering, excavation, or stream erosion. <br /> <br />Topple <br />A topple is a block of rock that tilts or rotates <br />forward on a pivot or hinge point and then <br /> <br />FIRM BEDDED ROCK <br /> <br /> <br />Figure 8a. Rockfall (Colorado Geological <br />Survey et al., 1988). <br /> <br /> <br />Figure 8b. Rockfall on U.S. Highway 6, <br />Colorado (photograph by Colorado <br />Geological Survey). <br /> <br />separates from the main mass, falling to the <br />slope below, and subsequently bouncing or <br />rolling down the slope (Figures 9a, b). <br /> <br />Slides <br />Although many types of mass movement are <br />included in the general term "landslide," the <br />more restrictive use of the term refers to move- <br />ments of soil or rock along a distinct surface of <br />rupture which separates the slide material <br />from more stable underlying material. The two <br />major types of landslides are rotational slides <br />and translational slides. <br /> <br />11 <br />
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