General remarks on Surface processes
Having talked about some of the basic elements of the Earth system, let's now look at some of the basic processes operating on system the Earth's surface. This is where rock, hydrosphere (oceans) and atmosphere all come together. Also the part of the Earth that we inhabit so many of those processes affect our lives (landslides, floods etc., or have affected our history and evolution (evolution of the landscape and climate).
We have talked about weathering of rocks in this zone to understand how regolith (surface debris including soil) and consequently, sediments are generated. We sai little about how the weathered rock debris is transported.
Four agents of transportation all- systems of which we will examine in turn
Agent system
gravity mass wasting
running water rivers, coastlines (hydrologic cycle)
moving air wind
moving ice glaciers, ice sheets and glaciations
deal with each of these in upcoming lectures
Mass Wasting (Movement) - Landslides |
Mass wasting is name given to all those processes where the Earth"s gravity is the dominant agent. Covers what are called landslides, mudflows etc.. Even snow avalanches
Factors influencing mass movement
o Steepness of slopes
o Nature of materials, conslidated or unconsolidated (loose)
o Amount of water
Steepness of slope
Component of weight parallel to slope. Steeper the slope, the greater is this component.
Thus, steeper the slope the more likely material is to move.
Nature of materials
Unconsolidated
Angle of repose
Angle of repose greater for coarser grain size
Angle of repose greater for moist materials, than for dry (surface tension
holds grains together)
(but water saturated materials have no strength)
Scree slopes and Talus cones
Consolidated materials
Includes solid rock, but also vegetated soils. Also soils contain clay minerals which are bound together by cohesion.
These infuenced by planes of weakness - bedding planes, joints
Amount of water
Obviously important controls cohesion.
Thus, heavy rainfall or melting snow can saturate unconsolidated material, loss of cohesion in consolidated materials thus triggers mass movement.
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Types (classification) of mass movements
Classify basically according to nature of motion, speed and whether in dominantly rock or unconsolidated.
Slide - rock debris
Avalanche - debris, even snow
Slump
Flow - like a thick fluid - flow (mud flow, earth flow, debris flow depending on comp)
Creep - soil, debris, Bending of bedding, or foliation
Sometimes slow movement almost imperceptible and may be cause of subsidence
What causes and triggers moderate to rapid (ie disastrous) mass movement ?
Anything that steepens slope, changes nature of slope materials introduces water, or changes water/rock interaction, so:
o Over steepening of slopes - either by human engineering or by natural
processes (undercutting by rivers etc)
o Heavy rainfall - storms, melting snow,
o earthquakes (because shaking causes liquefaction)
o Changing the properties of the slope materials - for example, de-forestation
Hazard from landslides
Annually a great deal of loss of life and property from mass movement (commonly called landslides). eg. California
Damming of rivers by landslides
eg. Gros Venture (Jackson Hole, Wyoming), Thistle, Utah
Marine Landslides
These do occur and can be very large. Main hazard is that they cause tsunam
Hawaii - flanks of Mauna Loa collapsed and slid eastward up to 5 km
Daytona - few years a large wave caused damage to this resort - thought to have been generated when a large landslide occurred on the continental shelf.