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Structures associated with strike-slip faults that bound landslide elements Structures associated with strike-slip faults that bound landslide elements

Large landslides are bounded on their flanks and on elements within the landslides by structures analogous to strike-slip faults. We observed the formation of thwse strike-slip faults and associated structures at two large landslides in central Utah during 1983-1985. The strike-slip faults in landslides are nearly vertical but locally may dip a few degrees toward or away from the moving...
Authors
R. W. Fleming, A. M. Johnson

Morphology of sea-floor landslides on Horizon Guyot: application of steady-state geotechnical analysis Morphology of sea-floor landslides on Horizon Guyot: application of steady-state geotechnical analysis

Mass movement and erosion have been identified on the pelagic sediment cap of Horizon Guyot, a seamount in the Mid-Pacific Mountains. Trends in the size, shape and preservation of bedforms and sediment textural trends on the pelagic cap indicate that bottom-current-generated sediment transport direction is upslope. Slumping of the sediment cap occurred on and that the net bedload...
Authors
R. E. Kayen, W. C. Schwab, H.J. Lee, M.E. Torresan, J.R. Hein, P. J. Quinterno, L.A. Levin

IRIS/USGS plans for upgrading the Global Seismograph Network IRIS/USGS plans for upgrading the Global Seismograph Network

This report has been prepared to provide information to organizations that may be asked to participate in a program to upgrade the global seismographic network. In most cases, the organizations that will be offered new instrumentation by the U.S. Geological Survey currently operate stations in the World-Wide Standardized Seismograph Network (WWSSN) or the Global Digital Seismograph...
Authors
Jon Peterson, Charles R. Hutt

Transformation of dilative and contractive landslide debris into debris flows-An example from Marin County, California Transformation of dilative and contractive landslide debris into debris flows-An example from Marin County, California

The severe rainstorm of January 3, 4 and 5, 1982, in the San Francisco Bay area, California, produced numerous landslides, many of which transformed into damaging debris flows. The process of transformation was studied in detail at one site where only part of a landslide mobilized into several episodes of debris flow. The focus of our investigation was to learn whether the landslide...
Authors
R. W. Fleming, S. D. Ellen, M.A. Algus

Earthquakes & Volcanoes, Volume 21, Number 1, 1989: Featuring the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado, USA Earthquakes & Volcanoes, Volume 21, Number 1, 1989: Featuring the U.S. Geological Survey's National Earthquake Information Center in Golden, Colorado, USA

Earthquakes and Volcanoes is published bimonthly by the U.S. Geological Survey to provide current information on earthquakes and seismology, volcanoes, and related natural hazards of interest to both generalized and specialized readers. The Secretary of the Interior has determined that the publication of this periodical is necessary in the transaction of the public business required by...
Authors
Henry Spall, Diane C. Schnabel

Large quaternary landslides in the central appalachian valley and ridge province near Petersburg, West Virginia Large quaternary landslides in the central appalachian valley and ridge province near Petersburg, West Virginia

Geological mapping and photointerpretation of side-looking airborne radar images and color-infrared aerial photographs reveal two large Quaternary landslides in the Valley and Ridge province of the central Appalachians near Petersburg, W. Va. The Elkhorn Mountain rock avalanche occurs on the thrust-faulted northwestern flank of the Elkhorn Mountain anticlinorium. A minimum of 7 × 106 m3...
Authors
C. Scott Southworth

The geometric signature: Quantifying landslide-terrain types from digital elevation models The geometric signature: Quantifying landslide-terrain types from digital elevation models

Topography of various types and scales can be fingerprinted by computer analysis of altitude matrices (digital elevation models, or DEMs). The critical analytic tool is the geometric signature, a set of measures that describes topographic form well enough to distinguish among geomorphically disparate landscapes. Different surficial processes create topography with diagnostic forms that...
Authors
R.J. Pike
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