Erosion
There are no mud slides in fire red only in ruby, sapphire and emerald.
Mudslides can kill people,destroy homes and destroy personal items.
Mudslides are dangerous because they can travel at high speeds, carry heavy debris, and destroy everything in their path. They can be triggered by heavy rainfall, snowmelt, or other factors that saturate the ground, leading to the destabilization of the soil and rock layers on a slope. Mudslides can cause significant damage to infrastructure, homes, and natural environments, as well as pose serious risks to human life.
Mudslides commonly occur in areas with steep slopes and loose soil or rock, often in mountainous regions or areas that have experienced wildfires. Regions with heavy rainfall, snowmelt, or earthquake activity are also prone to mudslides.
Mass wasting is considered by geologists as the movement of dirt, rock, sediment, and landscape downhill. Landslides, slump, creep, rock falls, debris falls, rock slides, mudslides, mudflows, lahar, avalanche, and debris flows are all types of mass wasting. Also, any kind of erosion (mechanical/chemical) moving sediment downhill.
Lava Slides in Red Rock Canyon - 1902 was released on: USA: November 1902
gravity
Mass movement (also known as mass wasting) can be any of four types of motions :creep (objects lean downhill over many years)slump (rock and soil slip down a hill in one large mass)slides (landslides : rock and soil slide downhill)flows (mudslides and mudflows: rock and soil mixed with water slides downhill)Under some definitions, there are two other types, which do not involve "flows" of material. They are :topples (rock pivots off a slope)falls (rock separates and falls without flowing)
Mudslides are typically caused by heavy rainfall or rapid snowmelt, which saturates the soil and triggers the downward movement of mud, rock, and debris on steep slopes. Factors such as deforestation, wildfires, and improper land use can also increase the likelihood of mudslides occurring.
Rock Slides
Mudslides form when a mass of soil, rock, and vegetation becomes saturated with water, losing its strength and cohesion, causing it to flow downhill. This saturation can be due to heavy rainfall, snowmelt, or rapid melting of ice, creating a fast-moving mixture of water and debris. Steep slopes and areas prone to erosion are more susceptible to mudslides.
rock slides