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Presentation
Deciphering Landslide Behavior Using Large-scale Flume Experiments
Proceedings of the First World Landslide Forum
  • Mark E. Reid, United States Geological Survey
  • Richard M. Iverson, United States Geological Survey
  • Neal R. Iverson, Iowa State University
  • Richard G. LaHusen, United States Geological Survey
  • Dianne L. Brien, United States Geological Survey
  • Matthew Logan, United States Geological Survey
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Disciplines
Publication Version
Published Version
Publication Date
1-1-2008
Conference Title
The First World Landslide Forum
Conference Date
November 18-21, 2008
Geolocation
(35.6761919, 139.6503106)
Abstract

Landslides can be triggered by a variety of hydrologic events and they can exhibit a wide range of movement dynamics. Effective prediction requires understanding these diverse behaviors. Precise evaluation in the field is difficult; as an alternative we performed a series of landslide initiation experiments in the large-scale, USGS debris-flow flume. We systematically investigated the effects of three different hydrologic triggering mechanisms, including groundwater exfiltration from bedrock, prolonged rainfall infiltration, and intense bursts of rain. We also examined the effects of initial soil porosity (loose or dense) relative to the soil’s critical-state porosity. Results show that all three hydrologic mechanisms can instigate landsliding, but water pathways, sensor response patterns, and times to failure differ. Initial soil porosity has a profound influence on landslide movement behavior. Experiments using loose soil show rapid soil contraction during failure, with elevated pore pressures liquefying the sediment and creating fast-moving debris flows. In contrast, dense soil dilated upon shearing, resulting in slow, gradual, and episodic motion. These results have fundamental implications for forecasting landslide behavior and developing effective warning systems.

Comments

This proceeding is published as Reid, Mark E., Richard M. Iverson, Neal R. Iverson, Richard G. LaHusen, Dianne L. Brien, and Matthew Logan. "Deciphering Landslide Behavior Using Large-scale Flume Experiments."In Proceedings of the First World Landslide Forum. The First World Landslide Forum. Tokyo, Japan. November 18-21, 2008.

Rights
Works produced by employees of the U.S. Government as part of their official duties are not copyrighted within the U.S. The content of this document is not copyrighted.
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Citation Information
Mark E. Reid, Richard M. Iverson, Neal R. Iverson, Richard G. LaHusen, et al.. "Deciphering Landslide Behavior Using Large-scale Flume Experiments" Tokyo, JapanProceedings of the First World Landslide Forum (2008) p. 497 - 500
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/neal-iverson/47/