It doesnt fack you
fall
It doesn't.
yes
Maybe the slope went slower because of the water went slower
It really depends on the slope. If it is a steep slope, the runoff will flow downhill faster and collect more at the bottom. If it is a pretty level slope, the runoff won't collect at the bottom of it. The water will just flood the top of the slope.
Slope Gradient
fall
When the gravitational force acting on a slope exceeds its resisting force, slope failure (mass wasting) occurs. The slope material's strength and cohesion and the amount of internal friction between material help maintain the slope's stability and are known collectively as the slope's shear strength. The steepest angle that a cohesionless slope can maintain without losing its stability is known as its angle of repose. When a slope possesses this angle, its shear strength perfectly counterbalances the force of gravity acting upon it. Mass wasting may occur at a very slow rate, particularly in areas that are very dry or those areas that receive sufficient rainfall such that vegetation has stabilised the surface. It may also occur at very high speed, such as in rock slides or landslides, with disastrous consequences, both immediate and delayed, e.g., resulting from the formation of landslide dams. Factors that change the potential of mass wasting include: change in slope angle; weakening of material by weathering; increased water content; changes in vegetation cover; and overloading.
The force of gravity causes mass wasting to occur faster.
Gravity, geological age, and slope angel
Mass wasting or mass movement refers to the movement of rock debris down a slope due to the influence of gravity. The movement is induced by natural factors or by human interferance on hill slope. The movement can be slow or fast.
mass wasting is the down slope movement of rock and soil under the direct influence of gravity.mass wasting is the step that follows weathering in the evolution of most landforms.
how the values of the slope affect the overall meaning of the equation?
Soil creep is the slowest form of mass wasting.
The steeper the slope, the more work (force) has to be exerted.
Answer
Dr E. Hoek has written: 'Bibliography on Slope Stability'