some miners were mining in the mountain and hit ice and that is what got it more unstable and it was miners thet got it to collapse.
an earthquake
As magnification increases, the center of the slide would appear larger and more detailed. This is because magnification enlarges the image of the specimen on the slide, allowing you to see finer features with greater clarity at the center.
Heating a microscope slide over a flame can cause it to crack or shatter due to uneven expansion of the glass. It is not recommended to heat microscope slides in this manner as it can be dangerous and may damage the equipment.
If a slide had high friction, it would not function well as a slide. Things would either slow down during their descent or would stop completely (if the coefficient of friction were sufficiently large).You would either stop in mid slide, burn your bottom,or shred the seat of your pants.
If two plates slide by each other, they may cause friction and create earthquakes along the boundary where they meet, known as a transform plate boundary. The movement can be sudden and release a lot of energy, leading to seismic activity. Over time, this sliding can also lead to changes in the landscape along the boundary.
The Frank Slide occurred at approximately 4:10 a.m. on April 29, 1903. It was a massive rockslide that buried part of the mining town of Frank, Alberta, Canada.
The most significant effect of the Frank Slide was on the 90 people it killed.
By luck
Around 90 people are estimated to have died during the Frank Slide in 1903, when a massive rockslide buried part of the town of Frank in Alberta, Canada.
Hope Slide happened in 1965.
The Frank Slide
Slide Adventure MAGKID happened in 2007.
Fruity Frank happened in 1984.
It killed 90 people and pretty well obliterated the entire town of Frank.
At the time of the Frank Slide in 1903, the town of Frank, Alberta, had a population of about 600 residents. The catastrophic rockslide resulted in the deaths of approximately 70 people, significantly impacting the community. The disaster remains one of Canada's deadliest rockslides in history.
Kolka-Karmadon rock ice slide happened in 2002.
it would just slide away