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Field observations of landslides from Hurricane Helene in the Blue Ridge of northwestern North Carolina and northeastern Tennessee

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Detailed Description

Hurricane Helene devastated western North Carolina and parts of surrounding Tennessee and Virginia. A stalled front over the Blue Ridge prior to landfall of the hurricane resulted in cumulative rainfall totals of 20–30 inches from Sept. 25–27, 2024. This triggered numerous landslides and devastating flooding, and has changed the landscape of the Blue Ridge and mountain communities. This mapping and assessment of the landslides was conducted as part of the USGS Landslide Assessments, Situational Awareness and Event Response Research (LASER) and in cooperation with the North Carolina Geological Survey Landslide Hazard Program. Mapping efforts focused on the northernmost area heavily impacted from the storm: parts of Watauga, Avery, and Ashe County, NC, and parts of Johnson County, TN. Initial observational descriptions of the landslides are presented. Landslides mapped are separated into three type occurrences, hyperconcentrated earth flows, debris flows, and modified slope failures. Earth flows occurred on steep grassed slopes and consisted of soil with a mixture of vegetated clumps, saprolite, and rock. The landslide tracks were 10–338 m long, and scarp widths of 10–30 m that often cut down 1–2 m to bedrock. Earth flows often occurred in clusters, and some merged down slope. Debris flows had longer tracks, 96–1085 m, and consisted of a mixture of soil, rock, trees, vegetation, and other debris. Head scarps were 10–114 m wide and cut down through 1–3 m of colluvium to bedrock. Bedrock structures controlling the failures included joints, fractures, and foliation. Seven debris flows on Howards Creek initiated on steep slopes with aspect and slope close to the orientation of the foliation in bedrock (330/20–40° NE). Modified slope failures included landslides that initiated on road cuts, road embankments, steep cut slopes, and other slopes modified by construction (e.g., failed drainages or septic fields). Although the slope modification was important to initiate these slides, some localized along preexisting bedrock (saprolite) structures. Collectively, the impact of landslides from Hurricane Helene highlights the importance of basic geologic mapping and landslide assessment to build robust datasets to better understand and model the occurrence of landslides and strengthen our planning and rebuilding of mountain communities. 

Field observations of landslides from Hurricane Helene in the Blue Ridge of northwestern North Carolina and northeastern Tennessee, Merschat (2025), USGS Landslide Hazards Seminar, 30 July 2025. 

Details

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00:36:38

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Public Domain.

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