Geotechnical characteristics of large slow, very slow, and extremely slow landslides

2008 ◽  
Vol 45 (7) ◽  
pp. 984-1005 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Glastonbury ◽  
Robin Fell

Based on a study of 45 large slow-moving landslides, it is apparent that for a landslide to travel slowly after failure, the sliding is most likely to be active or reactivated, on a basal rupture surface at or close to residual strength. The likelihood of slow movement after failure is also increased when the inclination of the basal rupture surface is less than the residual friction angle. The slow-moving landslides are all of low rock-mass strength with varying degrees of disaggregation, or they possess soil strength. The influence of lateral margins on landslide restraint is generally small, with landslide movement typically controlled by fluctuations in piezometric pressure. The most commonly observed slow large landslides are mudslides and translational debris–rock slides, followed by particular forms of translational rock slides and internally sheared compound slides. Some mudslides display evidence of short periods of up to moderate velocities.

2010 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 116-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Glastonbury ◽  
Robin Fell

Based on the analysis of 51 case studies of large rapid rock slides, for a landslide to travel rapidly after failure there has to be a significant loss of strength on the basal surface of rupture, lateral margins, and (or) internally within the slide mass, or the factor of safety has to be maintained below 1.0 after failure by high groundwater pressures. Internally sheared compound slides and translational slides may all travel rapidly depending on their detailed geotechnical and geometric characteristics. The characteristics of these landslides that suggest an increased likelihood of rapid failure have been identified. All the rapid rock slides examined in this study involved relatively high-strength rock masses. Most cases were considered to be first-time landslides, largely involving brittleness on the basal rupture surface. However, there were some cases considered to be reactivated or active landslides on pre-sheared rupture surfaces. For this latter group, the loss of strength leading to rapid landsliding was associated with brittle internal deformation or lateral margins.


1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 8-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. M. Cruden

The Frank Slide is the best known of a number of major rock slides in the Canadian Rockies. Seven other slides of the same order of magnitude are described from the Front and Main Ranges between Jasper and the United States border.The geometry and kinematics of the slides are controlled by discontinuities in the rock slide mass. Typically, the major part of the rupture surface is parallel to bedding; the orientation of the lateral margins and the scarp of the slide may be controlled by joint sets.Sliding tends to occur on slopes where bedding dips towards valleys at angles between 30 and 40° and in thickly-bedded, massive weathering rocks such as quartzites, dolomites, and limestones. Major causes of sliding appear to be erosion at the foot and lateral margins of the slide mass.The slides may be easily identified on aerial photographs by their effect on the local vegetation and by the characteristic appearance of their debris. All the slides observed are post-glacial, their frequency seems to have been underestimated and, in places, they may impose major constraints on further development.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohit Mishra ◽  
Gildas Besançon ◽  
Guillaume Chambon ◽  
Laurent Baillet ◽  
Arnaud Watlet ◽  
...  

<p><span>Landslides display heterogeneity in movement types and rates, ranging from creeping motion to catastrophic acceleration. In most of the catastrophic events, rocks, debris, or soil can travel at several tens of meters per year speed, causing significant cost in life losses, infrastructure, economy, and ecosystem of the region. In contrast, slow-moving landslides display typical velocities scaling from few centimeters to several meters per year. Although slow-moving landslides rarely claim life losses, they can still cause considerable damage to public and private infrastructure. Sometimes these slow, persistent landslides eventually lead to catastrophic acceleration, e.g., clayey landslides are prone to these transitions. Such events need to be detected by Early Warning Systems (EWS) in advance to take timely actions to reduce life and economic losses. Several approaches are proposed to forecast the time of failure; still, there is a need to improve prediction strategies and EWS’s. </span></p><p><span>Here we present state and parameter estimation for a simplified viscoplastic sliding model of a landslide using a Kalman filter approach, which is termed as an observer problem in control theory. The model under investigation is based on underlying mechanics (physics-based model) that portray a landslide behavior. In this model, a slide block is assumed to be placed on an inclined surface, where landslide (slide block) motion is regulated by basal pore fluid pressure and opposed by sliding resistance governed by friction, cohesion, and viscosity. This model is described by an Ordinary Differential Equation (ODE) with displacement as a state and landslide material and geometrical properties as parameters. In this approach, known parameter values (landslide geometrical parameters and some material properties) and water table height time-series are provided as input. Finally, two illustrative examples validate the presented approach: i) a synthetic case study and ii) Hollin hill landslide (Uhlemann et al., 2016) field data. </span></p><p><span>In both examples, displacement, friction angle, and viscosity are well estimated from known parameter values, water table height time-series, and displacement measurements. In the simulation results for the Hollin Hill field data, it is observed that friction angle almost remains constant while viscosity varies significantly through time.</span></p><p> </p><p><span>Uhlemann, S., Smith, A., Chambers, J., Dixon, N., Dijkstra, T., Haslam, E., Meldrum P., Merritt, A., Gunn, D., and Mackay, J., (2016). Assessment of ground-based monitoring techniques applied to landslide investigations. </span><em><span>Geomorphology</span></em><span>, 253, 438-451. doi:10.1016/j.geomorph.2015.10.027.</span></p>


2014 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-57
Author(s):  
Sima Ghosh ◽  
Arijit Saha

In the present analysis, using the horizontal slice method and D'Alembert's principle, a methodology is suggested to calculate the pseudo-dynamic active earth pressure on battered face retaining wall supporting cohesive-frictional backfill. Results are presented in tabular form. The analysis provides a curvilinear rupture surface depending on the wall-backfill parameters. Effects of a wide range of variation of parameters like wall inclination angle (a), wall friction angle (d), soil friction angle (F), shear wave velocity (Vs), primary wave velocity (Vp), horizontal and vertical seismic accelerations (kh, kv) along with horizontal shear and vertical loads and non-linear wedge angle on the seismic active earth pressure coefficient have been studied.


1996 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 129-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. van der Veen ◽  
I. M. Whillans

A simple model is developed based on the notion that on active ice streams the resistance to flow is partitioned between basal drag and lateral drag. The relative roles of these sources of resistance is determined by a friction parameter that effectively describes the strength of the bed under the ice stream. Reduction in the basal strength is caused by meltwater production, taken proportional to the product of basal drag and ice speed. The width of the ice stream is governed by the balance between entrainment or erosion of ice from the slow-moving inter-stream ridges and advection from the ridges into the ice stream. Entrainment of ridge ice is parameterized as a function of the shear stress at the lateral margins, in one case proportional to the lateral shear stress and in the second case scaled to ice-stream width. In the first formulation, the model rapidly becomes unstable but, using the second formulation, a steady state is reached with lateral drag providing all or most of the resistance to flow. The results point to the great importance of achieving an understanding of entrainment. With the second model and a wide range of parameter values, there is no cyclic behavior, with rapid flow being followed by a quiescent phase.


2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 363
Author(s):  
Arash Razmyar ◽  
Abolfazl Eslami

Considering the increasing population growth and the rapid growth of urbanization and pollution in the environment, providing zoning maps and urban engineering geology seem to be important. The rapid construction growth of cities, as well as the confrontation with events such as earthquakes and failure to observe the geological and geotechnical issues, has caused many engineering problems. The use of geophysical methods not only cannot lonely provide us a complete and comprehensive information on the geotechnical conditions of the earth but also has many disturbances in urban areas, and its use in urban centers is almost impractical. Therefore, it seems that the best way of examining and interpreting the geotechnical characteristics of a site, especially in urban areas, is the use of suspicious data. Therefore, performing geotechnical studies and geotechnical zoning can be useful for retrofitting buildings and engineering structures and reducing their risks. Hence, zoning studies are conducted in this research in order to better recognize the technical soil status for safe construction due to rising the population of Tehran in recent decades and the concentration of population in certain areas of Tehran, especially in the eastern and western regions (districts 4 and 22). In this study, different geotechnical field tests such as standard penetration test (SPT), cone penetration test (CPT) were used to estimate parameters such as adhesion coefficient (C), internal friction angle ( ), Young modulus (E). Other common experiments with conventional geophysical experiments, such as in good experiments, refractive and CSSW were applied to estimate geophysical parameters of bedrock depth and shear wave velocity for zoning these areas.


2016 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 24-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ireneusz Malik ◽  
Małgorzata Wistuba ◽  
Piotr Migoń ◽  
Maria Fajer

Abstract We found ubiquitous evidence of ongoing slope instability by analysing the variability of tree-ring eccentricity index in trees growing on three apparently relict landslide slopes in the Sudetes (Poland, Central Europe). Slow movement of these landslide bodies occurs in the present-day conditions and is recorded almost every year, although with variable intensity. Correlation of dendrochronological record with the rainfall record from a nearby station in Mieroszów for the 1977–2007 period is very poor for two deep-seated rotational slides at Mt Suchawa and Mt Turzyna but considerably better for a shallow flowslide at Mt Garbatka. While this may reflect higher permeability of heavily jointed rocks involved in deep-seated sliding this could be linked with imperfections in the rainfall record. Dendrochronology proved capable of detecting minor displacements within landslides which otherwise show no geomorphic evidence of recent activity. Therefore, claims for the entirely relict nature of the landslides are not substantiated.


PROMINE ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Novandri Kusuma Wardana

Mining activities iscommonlyto work with the problem of deformation or rock movement, this is causingthe shift of rock mass and generated in the occurrence of landslides activity. Slope Stability Analysisrequired that the slope in stable condition. Therefore, stable bench is needed to prevent failure benchthat bring about interference either tool traffic or loading material during production process. Testing ofUCS value is done on 6 lithology that is on asphalt lithology, mudstone, siltstone, sandstone andclaystone. Based on the results of laboratory testing show that value of cohesion and friction angle togenerate by using Generalized Hoek Brown Failure Criterion method.The values of cohesion andfriction angle in asphalt are 0.080712 MPa and 26.3176 º. Asphalt Rock Mass Strength Value is0.145453 MPa. The values of cohesion and friction angle in mudstone are 0.075424 MPa and17.4773º. Rock Mass Value The mudstone rock is 0.220617 MPa. The values of cohesion and frictionangle in siltstone are 0,105107 MPa and 28,2864º. Rock Mass Strength siltstone rock is 0.311426MPa. The values of cohesion and friction angle in the sandstone are 0.180389 MPa And 38.9621º.Rock mass strength sandstone rock is 0.739092 MPa. The values of cohesion and friction angle insiltstone are 0.180389 MPa And 38.9621º. The Power of Mass The siltstone rock is 0.739092MPa.The values of cohesion and friction angle in mudstone are 0.180389 MPa And 38.9621º. RockMass Strength value The mudstone rock is 0.739092 MPa. Given that in Geological Strength Indexmethod only qualitative data will be more accurate using RMR method so it can get quantitative data.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 1527-1549 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Cascini ◽  
D. Peduto ◽  
G. Pisciotta ◽  
L. Arena ◽  
S. Ferlisi ◽  
...  

Abstract. Testing innovative procedures and techniques to update landslide inventory maps is a timely topic widely discussed in the scientific literature. In this regard remote sensing techniques – such as the Synthetic Aperture Radar Differential Interferometry (DInSAR) – can provide a valuable contribution to studies concerning slow-moving landslides in different geological contexts all over the world. In this paper, DInSAR data are firstly analysed via an innovative approach aimed at enhancing both the exploitation and the interpretation of remote sensing information; then, they are complemented with the results of an accurate analysis of survey-recorded damage to facilities due to slow-moving landslides. In particular, after being separately analysed to provide independent landslide movement indicators, the two datasets are combined in a DInSAR-Damage matrix which can be used to update the state of activity of slow-moving landslides. Moreover, together with the information provided by geomorphological maps, the two datasets are proven to be useful in detecting unmapped phenomena. The potentialities of the adopted procedure are tested in an area of southern Italy where slow-moving landslides are widespread and accurately mapped by using geomorphological criteria.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-8
Author(s):  
Zuofei Yan ◽  
Yahong Deng ◽  
Jia He ◽  
You Xuan ◽  
Wei Wu

Reasonable determination of the magnitude and distribution of dynamic earth pressure is one of the major challenges in the seismic design of retaining walls. Based on the principles of pseudodynamic method, the present study assumed that the critical rupture surface of backfill soil was a composite curved surface which was in combination with a logarithmic spiral and straight line. The equations for the calculation of seismic total active thrusts on retaining walls were derived using limit equilibrium theory, and earth pressure distribution was obtained by differentiating total active thrusts. The effects of initial phase, amplification factor, and soil friction angle on the distribution of seismic active earth pressure have also been discussed. Compared to pseudostatic and pseudodynamic methods for the determination of planar failure surface forms, the proposed method receives a bit lower value of seismic active earth pressures.


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