Landslide processes of the eastern United States and Puerto Rico
Slope movements triggered by heavy rainfall, November 3–5, 1985, in Virginia and West Virginia, U.S.A.
-
Published:January 01, 1989
-
CiteCitation
Robert B. Jacobson, Elizabeth D. Cron, John P. McGeehin, 1989. "Slope movements triggered by heavy rainfall, November 3–5, 1985, in Virginia and West Virginia, U.S.A.", Landslide processes of the eastern United States and Puerto Rico, Arthur P. Schultz, Randall W. Jibson
Download citation file:
- Share
Study of slope movements triggered by the storm of November 3–5, 1985, in the central Appalachian Mountains, U.S.A., has helped to define the meteorologic conditions leading to slope movements and the relative importance of land cover, bedrock, surficial geology, and geomorphology in slope movement location. This long-duration rainfall at moderate intensities triggered more than 1,000 slope movements in a 1,040-km2 study area. Most were shallow slips and slip-flows in thin colluvium and residuum on shale slopes. Locations of these failures were sensitive to land cover and slope aspect but were relatively insensitive to topographic setting. A few shallow slope movements were triggered by the same rainfall on interbedded limestone, shale, and sandstone. Several large debris slide-avalanches were triggered in sandstone regolith high on ridges in areas of the highest measured rainfall. Most of these sites were on slopes that dip 30 to 35° and lie parallel to bedding planes, presumably the sites of least stability.
- aerial photography
- Appalachians
- avalanches
- bedrock
- carbonate rocks
- Carboniferous
- Central Appalachians
- clastic rocks
- clastic sediments
- colluvium
- debris flows
- failures
- geomorphology
- Greenbrier Limestone
- Juniata Formation
- landslides
- limestone
- Lower Mississippian
- Lower Silurian
- mass movements
- Mauch Chunk Formation
- Mississippian
- North America
- Ordovician
- Paleozoic
- Pocono Formation
- rainfall
- Reedsville Formation
- residuum
- sandstone
- sedimentary rocks
- sediments
- shale
- Silurian
- Tuscarora Formation
- United States
- Upper Mississippian
- Upper Ordovician
- Virginia
- West Virginia
- Wills Mountain Anticline
- Oswego Sandstone