Topographic development in mountainous landscapes is a complex interplay between tectonics, climate and denudation. Glaciers erode valleys to generate headwall relief, and hillslope processes control the height and retreat of the peaks. The magnitude-frequency of these landslides and their long-term ability to lower mountains above glaciers is poorly understood; however, small, frequent rockfalls are currently thought to dominate. The preservation of rarer, larger, landslide deposits is exceptionally short-lived, as they are rapidly reworked. The 2013 Mount Haast rock avalanche that failed from the slopes of Aoraki/Mount Cook, New Zealand, onto the glacier accumulation zone below was invisible to conventional remote sensing after just 3 months. Here we use sub-surface data to reveal the now-buried landslide deposit, and suggest that large landslides are the primary hillslope erosion mechanism here. These data show how past large landslides can be identified in accumulation zones, providing an untapped archive of erosive events in mountainous landscapes.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ncomms8964 | DOI Listing |
Sci Rep
December 2024
Mining College, Guizhou University, Guiyang, 550025, Guizhou, China.
Mining geological disasters occur frequently in Guizhou, with mine mining and rainfall-induced avalanche geological disasters mainly, the investigation concluded that the hard rock of the overlying slide body is mostly sandstone, and it is crucial to study the physical and mechanical properties of sandstone under the action of mine mining (hereinafter referred to as the action of mining) and water action. The paper analyzes the deterioration characteristics of sandstone hydrophysical and mechanical properties under the action of mining and water. The main research results are as follows: (1) The water absorption rate of sandstone increased by 0.
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September 2024
Huadong Engineering Corporation Limited, Hangzhou, 311122, China.
A large-scale, high-speed, long-runout landslide occurred in Xinmo Village, Maoxian, Sichuan Province, China, on June 24, 2017. It was characterized by fast sliding speed, rapid volume growth, and large impact area. The dynamic process of such landslides and the influence of erosion on the dynamic process are studied by field investigation, numerical inversion and simulation.
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September 2024
Institut Terre et Environnement de Strasbourg (ITES), CNRS UMR 7063, Université de Strasbourg, Strasbourg, France.
Sensors (Basel)
November 2023
Badong National Observation and Research Station of Geohazards, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China.
Geohazards, such as landslides, rock avalanches, debris flow, ground fissures, and ground subsidence, pose significant threats to people's lives and property [...
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
October 2023
Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139.
Deformation of all materials necessitates the collective propagation of various microscopic defects. On Earth, fracturing gives way to crystal-plastic deformation with increasing depth resulting in a "brittle-to-ductile" transition (BDT) region that is key for estimating the integrated strength of tectonic plates, constraining the earthquake cycle, and utilizing deep geothermal resources. Here, we show that the crossing of a BDT in marble during deformation experiments in the laboratory is accompanied by systematic increase in the frequency of acoustic emissions suggesting a profound change in the mean size and propagation velocity of the active defects.
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