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An avalanche is a massive slide of snow, ice, rock or debris down a mountainside. Provoked by an earth tremor, extreme precipitation or man-made disturbances (such as a loud noise or the heavy movement of a skier or snowboarder), an avalanche can reach speeds of over 200 m/h (300 km/h). The impact of the falling material and the winds produced by the flow can cause extensive damage to anything in its path. According to experts, there are some 1 million avalanches yearly.

In the case of a snow avalanche, the new snow that accumulates on top of another heavy layer of snow can begin to slide down the mountainside. The risk of an avalanche can be reduced by building a snow shed — a barrier made of rocks, soil and other materials — or by triggering a controlled avalanche at a time when no one is on the mountain.

The worst US avalanche occurred in 1910, when a snowslide swept two trains into a canyon in Wellington, WA, killing 96. In January 1962, an avalanche down an extinct volcano in Peru killed 3,000.

In case of an avalanche:

  • Since an avalanche always flows down the middle of a trail, be sure to walk on the side of the trail after a snowfall.
  • When an avalanche stops, snow is often packed as hard as concrete and is very hard to dig through, making chances of recovery and survival slim. Most avalanches that trap people are caused by people; it is prudent to choose safe paths when traveling on snow-covered slopes, testing for snow stability, listening for thudding noises and watching for shooting cracks in the ice or snow.
  • Be aware of escape routes, knowing which way you would jump in case of a sudden snowslide.
  • When skiing with a partner, never travel directly above your partner, but keep your partner in range of vision.
  • If you're caught in an avalanche, call out to others in your party so they'll know where to look for you. Then, quickly close your mouth so it doesn't fill with snow.
  • Try to grab onto a tree or make a lunge for the side of the trail.
  • If you're in a car, immediately shut off the engine in order to avoid the risk of carbon monoxide poisoning.
  • If possible, shed skis, poles and heavy packs, so you're not dragged down more.
  • Work hard using a swimming or rolling motion to try to stay on top of the snow or work your way to the side of the avalanche; try to keep your head upslope and avoid bumping into things like trees or rocks.
  • As the slide slows, try to get a hand or foot outside the snow so that others will be able to see you.
  • Cup an arm or hand in front of your face to form an air pocket, and try to expand your chest.
  • If buried, try to relax to preserve oxygen. Yell out only if you hear someone directly above you.

In the case of an avalanche, the best protection is prevention; most victims of avalanches triggered the slide that they were caught in. Even experienced skiiers, snowboarders, and mountain climbers often underestimate the hazard the snow poses and overestimate their ability to cope with it. Watch out for the danger signs and take all precautions to avoid the slide!

A landslide is a type of avalanche consisting of materials such as rock, slag or coal. Torrential rains and storms can cause a massive flow of mud, called a mudslide. Worldwide, there are thousands of deaths and injuries, and billions of dollars in damage caused by landslides. These slides are most likely to happen in places where such slides have already occurred, at the bases of steep slopes, at the bases of drainage channels and on developed hillsides where leach-field septic systems are used.

In case of a landslide:

  • Have a family evacuation plan including phone numbers and a safe place to which to evacuate.
  • If there is time, turn off the house utilities (gas, water, electricity) at the main switches.
  • Establish escape routes from each room in the house.
  • If you are caught in a landslide, try to curl up in a ball and protect yourself from the debris as it hurtles by.
  • If you live in the US and are in an area that is at risk for landslides, it is recommended that you have insurance coverage.

In 1903, the Canadian town of Frank, Alberta, was wiped out when 90 tons of limestone tumbled down the Turtle Mountains, killing 95 people in an event that was dubbed the Frank Slide. On May 31, 1970, a devastating earthquake triggered a huge avalanche of rock and ice from the summit of Nevado Huascaran, the highest peak in Peru. Part of the landslide jumped a 200-meter ridge, wiping out the town of Yungay and killing nearly all its 20,000 inhabitants. This is the worst recorded avalanche disaster in history.

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(lănd'slīd') pronunciation
n.
    1. The downward sliding of a relatively dry mass of earth and rock.
    2. The mass that slides. Also called landslip.
    1. An overwhelming majority of votes for a political party or candidate.
    2. An election that sweeps a party or candidate into office.
  1. A great victory.
landsliding land'slid'ing n.


The movement of a mass of rock or soil down a slope. The term is used to describe a variety of phenomena, from rock falls to the gradual downhill flow of soil. Landslides occur when the force of gravity acting on the materials within a slope overcomes the material's resistance to shearing. Among the processes that can lead to a landslide are the steepening of a slope by natural erosion or excavation, the overloading of the slope by an inflow of water, and the motion caused by an earthquake.

For more information on landslide, visit Britannica.com.

The perceptible downward sliding, falling, or flowing of masses of soil, rock, and debris (mixtures of soil and weathered rock fragments). Landslides range in size from a few cubic meters to over 109 m3 (3.5 × 1010 ft3), their velocities range from a few centimeters per day to over 100 m/s (330 ft/s), and their displacements may be several centimeters to several kilometers. See also Mass wasting.

The U.S. Highway Research Board classification divides landsliding of rock, soil, and debris, on the basis of the types of movement, into falls, slides, and flows. Other classifications consider flows, along with creep and other kinds of landslides, as general forms of mass wasting.

Falls occur when soil or rock masses free-fall through air. Falls are usually the result of collapse of cliff overhangs which result from undercutting by rivers or simply from differential erosion. Slides invariably involve shear displacement or failure along one or more narrow zones or planes. Internal deformation of the sliding mass after initial failure depends on the kinetic energy of the moving mass (size and velocity), the distance traveled, and the internal strength of the mass. Flows have internal displacement and a shape that resemble those of viscous fluids. Relatively weak and wet masses of shale, weathered rock, and soil may move in the form of debris flows and earthflows; water-soaked soils or weathered rock may displace as mudflows.

Mining and civil engineering works have induced myriads of landslides, a few of them of a catastrophic nature. Open-pitmines and road cuts create very high and steep slopes, often quite close to their stability limit. Local factors (weak joints, fault planes) or temporary ones (surges of water pressure inside the slopes, earthquake shocks) induce the failure of some of these slopes. The filling of reservoirs submerges the lower portion of natural, marginally stable slopes or old landslides. Water lowers slope stability by softening clays and by buoying the lowermost portion, or toe, of the slope.

Advances in soil and rock engineering have improved the knowledge of slope stability and the mechanics of landsliding. Small and medium-sized slopes in soil and rock can be made more stable. Remedial measures include lowering the slope angle, draining the slope, using retaining structures, compressing the slope with rock bolts or steel tendons, and grouting. See also Engineering geology; Erosion; Soil mechanics.


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n

Definition: decisive victory
Antonyms: narrow victory

A form of mass movement where the displaced material retains its form as it moves. Landslides are prompted by an increase in pore pressure through snow melt, through precipitation, and through spring action. These all reduce the friction which binds the mass to the slope. Probably the world's largest landslide occurred in south-west Iran in 1937, when a segment of the Kabir Kuh ridge, about 15 km long, 5 km wide and 300 m thick, slid off the mountain, with enough momentum to travel 20 km.

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landslide, rapid slipping of a mass of earth or rock from a higher elevation to a lower level under the influence of gravity and water lubrication. More specifically, rockslides are the rapid downhill movement of large masses of rock with little or no hydraulic flow, similar to an avalanche. Water-saturated soil or clay on a slope may slide downhill over a period of several hours. Earthflows of this type are usually not serious threats to life because of their slow movement, yet they can cause blockage of roads and do extensive damage to property. Mudflows are more spectacular streams of mud that pour down canyons in mountainous regions during major rainstorms where there is little vegetation to protect hillsides from erosion. The runoff from the storm and mud becomes a thin slurry that funnels down the canyons until it thickens and stops. Earthquakes also may cause landslides by shaking unconsolidated or weathered material from slopes. Rockslides triggered by an earthquake in Montana in 1959 caused an entire mountainside to slide into the Madison River gorge, killing 27 people in its path, damming the gorge, and forming a new lake. Humans have triggered a number of tragic landslides that have caused great damage and loss of life. In the Los Angeles area of California, extensive real estate development carried out on hillsides has resulted in widespread mudflows after winter rains have saturated the over-steepened embankments of soil. In some areas, slow-moving earthflows have been initiated by the lubrication of certain types of underlying clays by septic tank effluent. Submarine slides, or a sliding mix of seawater and sediment, are called turbidity currents. Undersea landslides can travel several hundred miles across very gradual slopes, riding on a thin film of water that reduces friction.


Cosmic Lexicon:

Landslide

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General term to describe the process of mass movement (or avalanche) of material downslope by falling, sliding, or flowing, under the force of gravity. It also describes the landform (pile of debris) produced.

Random House Word Menu:

categories related to 'landslide'

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Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to landslide, see:

  See crossword solutions for the clue Landslide.
Computer simulation of a "slump" landslide in San Mateo County, California (USA) in January 1997

A landslide or landslip is a geological phenomenon which includes a wide range of ground movement, such as rockfalls, deep failure of slopes and shallow debris flows, which can occur in offshore, coastal and onshore environments. Although the action of gravity is the primary driving force for a landslide to occur, there are other contributing factors affecting the original slope stability. Typically, pre-conditional factors build up specific sub-surface conditions that make the area/slope prone to failure, whereas the actual landslide often requires a trigger before being released.

Contents

Causes

The Mameyes Landslide, in barrio Tibes, Ponce, Puerto Rico, which buried more than 100 homes, was caused by extensive accumulation of rains and, according to some sources, lightning.

Landslides occur when the stability of a slope changes from a stable to an unstable condition. A change in the stability of a slope can be caused by a number of factors, acting together or alone. Natural causes of landslides include:

Landslides are aggravated by human activities, Human causes include:

The landslide at Surte in Sweden, 1950. It was a quick clay slide killing one person.

Types

Debris flow

Amboori debris flow, occurred on 9 November 2001 in Kerala, India. The event killed 39 people.[1]

Slope material that becomes saturated with water may develop into a debris flow or mud flow. The resulting slurry of rock and mud may pick up trees, houses and cars, thus blocking bridges and tributaries causing flooding along its path.

Debris flow is often mistaken for flash flood, but they are entirely different processes.

Muddy-debris flows in alpine areas cause severe damage to structures and infrastructure and often claim human lives. Muddy-debris flows can start as a result of slope-related factors and shallow landslides can dam stream beds, resulting in temporary water blockage. As the impoundments fail, a "domino effect" may be created, with a remarkable growth in the volume of the flowing mass, which takes up the debris in the stream channel. The solid-liquid mixture can reach densities of up to 2 tons/m³ and velocities of up to 14 m/s (Chiarle and Luino, 1998; Arattano, 2003). These processes normally cause the first severe road interruptions, due not only to deposits accumulated on the road (from several cubic metres to hundreds of cubic metres), but in some cases to the complete removal of bridges or roadways or railways crossing the stream channel. Damage usually derives from a common underestimation of mud-debris flows: in the alpine valleys, for example, bridges are frequently destroyed by the impact force of the flow because their span is usually calculated only for a water discharge. For a small basin in the Italian Alps (area = 1.76 km²) affected by a debris flow, Chiarle and Luino (1998)[citation needed] estimated a peak discharge of 750 m3/s for a section located in the middle stretch of the main channel. At the same cross section, the maximum foreseeable water discharge (by HEC-1), was 19 m³/s, a value about 40 times lower than that calculated for the debris flow that occurred.

Earth flow

A rock slide in Guerrero, Mexico

Earthflows are downslope, viscous flows of saturated, fine-grained materials, which move at any speed from slow to fast. Typically, they can move at speeds from 0.17 to 20 km/h. Though these are a lot like mudflows, overall they are slower moving and are covered with solid material carried along by flow from within. They are different from fluid flows in that they are more rapid. Clay, fine sand and silt, and fine-grained, pyroclastic material are all susceptible to earthflows. The velocity of the earthflow is all dependent on how much water content is in the flow itself: if there is more water content in the flow, the higher the velocity will be.

These flows usually begin when the pore pressures in a fine-grained mass increase until enough of the weight of the material is supported by pore water to significantly decrease the internal shearing strength of the material. This thereby creates a bulging lobe which advances with a slow, rolling motion. As these lobes spread out, drainage of the mass increases and the margins dry out, thereby lowering the overall velocity of the flow. This process causes the flow to thicken. The bulbous variety of earthflows are not that spectacular, but they are much more common than their rapid counterparts. They develop a sag at their heads and are usually derived from the slumping at the source.

Earthflows occur much more during periods of high precipitation, which saturates the ground and adds water to the slope content. Fissures develop during the movement of clay-like material creates the intrusion of water into the earthflows. Water then increases the pore-water pressure and reduces the shearing strength of the material.[2]

Debris avalanche

Goodell Creek Debris Avalanche, Washington

A debris avalanche is a type of slide characterized by the chaotic movement of rocks soil and debris mixed with water or ice (or both). They are usually triggered by the saturation of thickly vegetated slopes which results in an incoherent mixture of broken timber, smaller vegetation and other debris.[2] Debris avalanches differ from debris slides because their movement is much more rapid. This is usually a result of lower cohesion or higher water content and commonly steeper slopes.

Steep coastal cliffs can be caused by catastrophic debris avalanches. These have been common on the submerged flanks of ocean island volcanos such as the Hawaiian Islands and the Cape Verde Islands.[3]

Movement Debris slides generally start with big rocks that start at the top of the slide and begin to break apart as they slide towards the bottom. This is much slower than a debris avalanche. Debris avalanches are very fast and the entire mass seems to liquefy as it slides down the slope. This is caused by a combination of saturated material, and steep slopes. As the debris moves down the slope it generally follows stream channels leaving a v-shaped scar as it moves down the hill. This differs from the more U-shaped scar of a slump. Debris avalanches can also travel well past the foot of the slope due to their tremendous speed.[4]

Blockade of Hunza river

Sturzstrom

A sturzstrom is a rare, poorly understood type of landslide, typically with a long run-out. Often very large, these slides are unusually mobile, flowing very far over a low angle, flat, or even slightly uphill terrain.

Shallow landslide

Hotel Limone at the Lake Garda. Part of a hill of Devonian shale was removed to make the road, forming a dip-slope. The upper block detached along a bedding plane and is sliding down the hill, forming a jumbled pile of rock at the toe of the slide.

Landslide in which the sliding surface is located within the soil mantle or weathered bedrock (typically to a depth from few decimetres to some metres). They usually include debris slides, debris flow, and failures of road cut-slopes. Landslides occurring as single large blocks of rock moving slowly down slope are sometimes called block glides.

Shallow landslides can often happen in areas that have slopes with high permeable soils on top of low permeable bottom soils. The low permeable, bottom soils trap the water in the shallower, high permeable soils creating high water pressure in the top soils. As the top soils are filled with water and become heavy, slopes can become very unstable and slide over the low permeable bottom soils. Say there is a slope with silt and sand as its top soil and bedrock as its bottom soil. During an intense rainstorm, the bedrock will keep the rain trapped in the top soils of silt and sand. As the topsoil becomes saturated and heavy, it can start to slide over the bedrock and become a shallow landslide. R. H. Campbell did a study on shallow landslides on Santa Cruz Island California. He notes that if permeability decreases with depth, a perched water table may develop in soils at intense precipitation. When pore water pressures are sufficient to reduce effective normal stress to a critical level, failure occurs.[5]

Deep-seated landslide

Landslide of soil and regolith in Pakistan

Landslides in which the sliding surface is mostly deeply located below the maximum rooting depth of trees (typically to depths greater than ten meters). Deep-seated landslides usually involve deep regolith, weathered rock, and/or bedrock and include large slope failure associated with translational, rotational, or complex movement. These typically move slowly, only several meters per year, but occasionally move faster. They tend to be larger than shallow landslides and form along a plane of weakness such as a fault or bedding plane. They can be visually identified by concave scarps at the top and steep areas at the toe.[6]

Causing tsunamis

Landslides that occur undersea, or have impact into water, can generate tsunamis. Massive landslides can also generate megatsunamis, which are usually hundreds of meters high. In 1958, one such tsunami occurred in Lituya Bay in Alaska.

Related phenomena

  • An avalanche, similar in mechanism to a landslide, involves a large amount of ice, snow and rock falling quickly down the side of a mountain.
  • A pyroclastic flow is caused by a collapsing cloud of hot ash, gas and rocks from a volcanic explosion that moves rapidly down an erupting volcano.

Landslide prediction mapping

Global landslide risks
Ferguson Slide on California State Route 140 in June 2006

Landslide hazard analysis and mapping can provide useful information for catastrophic loss reduction, and assist in the development of guidelines for sustainable land use planning. The analysis is used to identify the factors that are related to landslides, estimate the relative contribution of factors causing slope failures, establish a relation between the factors and landslides, and to predict the landslide hazard in the future based on such a relationship.[7] The factors that have been used for landslide hazard analysis can usually be grouped into geomorphology, geology, land use/land cover, and hydrogeology. Since many factors are considered for landslide hazard mapping, GIS is an appropriate tool because it has functions of collection, storage, manipulation, display, and analysis of large amounts of spatially referenced data which can be handled fast and effectively.[8] Remote sensing techniques are also highly employed for landslide hazard assessment and analysis. Before and after aerial photographs and satellite imagery are used to gather landslide characteristics, like distribution and classification, and factors like slope, lithology, and land use/land cover to be used to help predict future events.[9] Before and after imagery also helps to reveal how the landscape changed after an event, what may have triggered the landslide, and shows the process of regeneration and recovery.[10]

Using satellite imagery in combination with GIS and on-the-ground studies, it is possible to generate maps of likely occurrences of future landslides.[11] Such maps should show the locations of previous events as well as clearly indicate the probable locations of future events. In general, to predict landslides, one must assume that their occurrence is determined by certain geologic factors, and that future landslides will occur under the same conditions as past events.[12] Therefore, it is necessary to establish a relationship between the geomorphologic conditions in which the past events took place and the expected future conditions.[13]

Natural disasters are a dramatic example of people living in conflict with the environment. Early predictions and warnings are essential for the reduction of property damage and loss of life. Because landslides occur frequently and can represent some of the most destructive forces on earth, it is imperative to have a good understanding as to what causes them and how people can either help prevent them from occurring or simply avoid them when they do occur. Sustainable land management and development is an essential key to reducing the negative impacts felt by landslides.

GIS offers a superior method for landslide analysis because it allows one to capture, store, manipulate, analyze, and display large amounts of data quickly and effectively. Because so many variables are involved, it is important to be able to overlay the many layers of data to develop a full and accurate portrayal of what is taking place on the Earth's surface. Researchers need to know which variables are the most important factors that trigger landslides in any given location. Using GIS, extremely detailed maps can be generated to show past events and likely future events which have the potential to save lives, property, and money.

Prehistoric landslides

Rhine cutting through Flims Rockslide debris, Switzerland
  • Landslide which moved Heart Mountain to its current location, the largest ever discovered on land. In the 48 million years since the slide occurred, erosion has removed most of the portion of the slide.
  • Flims Rockslide, ca. 13,000 km3 (3,100 cu mi), Switzerland, some 10000 years ago in post-glacial Pleistocene/Holocene, the largest so far described in the alps and on dry land that can be easily identified in a modestly eroded state.[14]
  • The landslide around 200BC which formed Lake Waikaremoana on the North Island of New Zealand, where a large block of the Ngamoko Range slid and dammed a gorge of Waikaretaheke River, forming a natural reservoir up to 248 metres deep.
  • Cheekye Fan, British Columbia, Canada, ca. 25 km2 (9.7 sq mi), Late Pleistocene in age.

Prehistoric submarine landslides

  • The Storegga Slide, Norway, ca. 3,500 km3 (840 cu mi), ca. 8,000 years ago, a catastrophic impact on the contemporary coastal Mesolithic population
  • The Agulhas slide, ca. 20,000 km3 (4,800 cu mi), off South Africa, post-Pliocene in age, the largest so far described[15]
  • The Ruatoria Debris Avalanche, off North Island New Zealand, ca. 3,000 km³ in volume, 170,000 years ago.[16]
  • Catastrophic debris avalanches have been common on the submerged flanks of ocean island volcanos such as the Hawaiian Islands and the Cape Verde Islands.[17]

Historical landslides

Extraterrestrial landslides

Before and after radar images of a landslide on Venus. In the center of the image on the right, the new landslide, a bright, flow-like area, can be seen extending to the left of a bright fracture. 1990 image.
Landslide in progress on Mars, 2008-02-19

Evidence of past landslides has been detected on many bodies in the solar system, but since most observations are made by probes that only observe for a limited time and most bodies in the solar system appear to be geologically inactive not many landslides are known to have happened in recent times. Both Venus and Mars have been subject to long-term mapping by orbiting satellites, and examples of landslides have been observed on both.

See also

An infra-red view of a landslide in the Valley of the Geysers

References

  1. ^ History of landslide susceptibility and a chorology of landslide prone areas in the Western Ghats of Kerala, India. Environmental Geology. 2008. doi:10.1007/s00254-008-1431-9..
  2. ^ a b Easterbrook, Don J. (1999). Surface Processes and Landforms. Upper Saddle River: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 0-13-860958-6. 
  3. ^ Le Bas, T.P. (2007), "Slope Failures on the Flanks of Southern Cape Verde Islands", in Lykousis, Vasilios, Submarine mass movements and their consequences: 3rd international symposium, Springer, ISBN 978-1-4020-6511-8 
  4. ^ Schuster, R.L. & Krizek, R.J. (1978). Landslides: Analysis and Control. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences.
  5. ^ Renwick,W., Brumbaugh, R. and Loeher, L (1982). "Landslide Morphology and Processes on Santa Cruz Island California". Geografiska Annaler. Series A, Physical Geography 64 (3/4): 149–159. doi:10.2307/520642. JSTOR 520642. 
  6. ^ Johnson, B.F. Slippery slopes. Earth magazine. June 2010. pgs 48–55.
  7. ^ Chen, Zhaohua; Wang, Jinfei (2007). "Landslide hazard mapping using logistic regression model in Mackenzie Valley, Canada". Natural Hazards 42: 75. doi:10.1007/s11069-006-9061-6. 
  8. ^ Clerici, A; Perego, S; Tellini, C; Vescovi, P (2002). "A procedure for landslide susceptibility zonation by the conditional analysis method1". Geomorphology 48 (4): 349. doi:10.1016/S0169-555X(02)00079-X. 
  9. ^ Metternicht, G; Hurni, L; Gogu, R (2005). "Remote sensing of landslides: An analysis of the potential contribution to geo-spatial systems for hazard assessment in mountainous environments". Remote Sensing of Environment 98 (2–3): 284. doi:10.1016/j.rse.2005.08.004. 
  10. ^ De La Ville, Noemi; Chumaceiro Diaz, Alejandro; Ramirez, Denisse (2002). ""Remote Sensing and GIS Technologies as Tools to Support Sustainable Management of Areas Devastated by Landslides"" (PDF). Environment, Development and Sustainability 4 (2): 221. doi:10.1023/A:1020835932757. http://www.vliz.be/imisdocs/publications/35254.pdf. 
  11. ^ Fabbri, Andrea G.; Chung, Chang-Jo F.; Cendrero, Antonio; Remondo, Juan (2003). "Is Prediction of Future Landslides Possible with a GIS?". Natural Hazards 30 (3): 487. doi:10.1023/B:NHAZ.0000007282.62071.75. 
  12. ^ Lee, S; Talib, Jasmi Abdul (2005). "Probabilistic landslide susceptibility and factor effect analysis". Environmental Geology 47 (7): 982. doi:10.1007/s00254-005-1228-z. 
  13. ^ Ohlmacher, G (2003). "Using multiple logistic regression and GIS technology to predict landslide hazard in northeast Kansas, USA". Engineering Geology 69 (3–4): 331. doi:10.1016/S0013-7952(03)00069-3. 
  14. ^ Weitere Erkenntnisse und weitere Fragen zum Flimser Bergsturz A.v. Poschinger, Angewandte Geologie, Vol. 11/2, 2006
  15. ^ Dingle, R. V. (1977). "The anatomy of a large submarine slump on a sheared continental margin (SE Africa)". Journal of the Geological Society 134 (3): 293. doi:10.1144/gsjgs.134.3.0293. 
  16. ^ The giant Ruatoria debris avalanche on the northern Hikurangi margin, New Zealand: Result of oblique seamount subduction. Agu.org. Retrieved on 2010-12-16.
  17. ^ Le Bas, T.P. (2007), "Slope Failures on the Flanks of Southern Cape Verde Islands", in Lykousis, Vasilios, Submarine mass movements and their consequences: 3rd international symposium, Springer, ISBN 978-1-4020-6511-8 
  18. ^ "Hope Slide". BC Geographical Names. http://apps.gov.bc.ca/pub/bcgnws/names/53154.html. 
  19. ^ Large landslide in Gansu Zhouqu August 7 August 19, 2010. Retrieved August 19, 2010.
  20. ^ Brazil mudslide death toll passes 450. cbc.ca January 13, 2011. Retrieved January 13, 2011.

External links


Translations:

Landslide

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Dansk (Danish)
n. - jordskred, bjergskred, skred, stemmeskred, pludselig stemmeforskydning

idioms:

  • landslide victory    jordskredssejr

Nederlands (Dutch)
aardverschuiving, aardverzakking

Français (French)
n. - (Géol) glissement de terrain

idioms:

  • landslide victory    victoire écrasante, (remporter) une victoire écrasante

Deutsch (German)
n. - Erdrutsch

idioms:

  • landslide victory    Erdrutschwahlsieg

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - γεωλίσθηση, κατολίσθηση, καθίζηση

idioms:

  • landslide victory    σαρωτική εκλογική νίκη

Italiano (Italian)
frana

idioms:

  • landslide victory    vittoria clamorosa

Português (Portuguese)
n. - desmoronamento (m), deslizamento (m) de terra

idioms:

  • landslide victory    vitória esmagadora (fig.)

Русский (Russian)
оползень, победа на выборах, обваливаться, победить с большим перевесом

idioms:

  • landslide victory    блестящая победа

Español (Spanish)
n. - corrimiento o desprendimiento de tierras

idioms:

  • landslide victory    victoria electoral aplastante

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - jordskred, jordskredsseger

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
山崩

idioms:

  • landslide victory    压倒性大胜利

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 山崩

idioms:

  • landslide victory    壓倒性大勝利

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 산사태, 압도적 승리

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 地すべり, 山崩れ, 地すべり的大勝利, 地滑り

idioms:

  • landslide victory    大勝利

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) الانهيار الارضي‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮מפולת אדמה, ניצחון סוחף/מוחץ‬


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landslide track (geology)