Landslides

"The causes of landslides are not a mystery to mankind. Layers of rock and soil such that rain running along a clay or rock layer can create a slippery surface for the weight of the layers above it is a common cause. A rock jumble from previous mountain building, broken or fractured rock easily dislodged. We have stated that the earthquakes man experiences between the periodic passages of Planet X can be considered aftershocks from the last passage, and this is true of landslides also. Mountain building rumples the landscape, so the land is not flat but has steep ravines and hill sides. Older mountain ranges are recognized for their rounded or smoothed appearance, because of frequent landslides distributing the rubble.

"As we approach another passage, another Pole Shift, the pace of landslides has picked up. Why would this be? Plates under pressure will put pressure on regions that contain rumpled hillsides and deep ravines, as these give more readily than strictly flat land, thus act as a weak link. In addition, due to the wobble, the weather has gotten more extreme, with drought and deluge increasing in extremes. Dry ground, suddenly flooded with rainwater needing to seek its level as runoff, will create internal water slides between the rock and soil layers that constitute the rumpled hillsides. Is there an early warning system that mankind could use? The trembles that soil about to slide emits could be detected, yes. These are not earthquakes, and have their own frequency. "

ZetaTalk Chat Q&A: March 22, 2014

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  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.westernslopenow.com/news/local-news/landslide-lake-breac... 

    Landslide lake breaches near Collbran

    The lake breached the lake wall causing a surge of muddy water through the town

    Published 05/27 2016 06:29PM

    It's in an alarm clock no Collbran resident wants to wake up to.
    "About 4:30 we heard a noise" said Collbran resident Kathy Puccini, who lives on the bank of West Salt Creek. "We though it was the normal over flow from Vega."
    Instead the lake that has formed onto of the remnants of the West Salt Creek landslide had breached for a second time.
    "We started seeing our water alarm monitor on the upper pond. Which is about a 400 acre-foot pond-- very large size-- behind the land blocked mass up there letting us know that the pond was discharging." said Pete Baier, the Administrative Deputy for Mesa County Operations.
    Last year was a pipeline that formed underneath the muddy chute Friday morning: Water had cut a canyon with cliffs estimated at 100 feet tall.
    "This was one a little bit different it sounded like they were moving-- like something was moving underneath the ground. Rocks, really loud rocks." said Puccini.
    Living on the bank of the Plateau creek, the Puccini's say they're lucky as the worst their home saw was mud on the porch posts. However, they fear for other Collbran residents who have faired much worse. 
    On the now-closed Salt Creek Road, stables have been flooded, property washed downstream and residents who can't leave their homes.
    "Every year as the snow melts, a small lake forms behind this land mass and this puts additional pressure on that land mass. This is what we wanted to have happen. So by nature relieving itself effectively by forming this channel, that pressure cannot build up as high." said Baier.
    but down on the creek banks, residents with mud flowing through their backyard aren't as easily comforted.
    "After we heard it was from Salt Creek, then we were worried. Because They supposedly have this big old hole up their filled with water and we don't know what's going on." said Puccini.
    Officials say the timing of this breach was ideal-- had the spill-over at Vega Lake coincided with the breach, Collbran could have seen flood damage much worse. As of now, Collbran residents are told to be prepared to evacuate. Officials will promptly alert residents in the unlikely event where an evacuation is needed.

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://abc13.com/news/heartbreak-as-landslide-tears-homes-apart/137...

    HEARTBREAK AS LANDSLIDE TEARS HOMES APART IN BOISE

    BOISE, ID --There is heartbreak in the foothills of Idaho after a landslide has destroyed a number of homes.
    "You're going to hear lots of cracking through here, and that's normal."

    Stacy says the signs of damage were small at first.

    "So this is the first crack I noticed, and at the time it was only a millimeter big. You can see what has happened since," Stacy says. "It's just snowballed fast since then."
    Throughout her once beautiful family home, piles of debris and framing are strewn about the home as the wood floor and foundation crumble beneath.
    The landslide has pulled the house from its foundation, displaying the incredible force of the earth's movement. 

    The situation, Stacy says, has been hard to explain to her children as they flee their home for safety.
    "My second grader started taping up the walls and the hardwood, trying to fix all the cracks," she says.
    Down the street, her neighbor Leslie says their home is in better shape, but are unsure for how long.
    A concrete step which once met the walkway outside her front door is now significantly lower than it once was. 

    Inside the home, the same tell-tale signs of cracking walls and foundation are becoming evident as they did for Stacy.
    "Once we started seeing the cracks inside, we realized we were kind of following the same path," Leslie says.
    Several agencies say they are working to stop the slide, but neighbors say it isn't happening.
    Moving trucks have denied their requests for help because of insurance concerns. In the meantime, neighbors are finding themselves in dire straits financially after being caught without landslide insurance.
    "It just feels like everyone who could help us in this situation has left," Leslie says. "That, think to me, is the hardest thing to really digest."

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2016-06/11/c_135427240.htm

    8 dead, 4 injured and 30 missing in Colombian landslide

    Source: Xinhua   2016-06-11 04:41:47

    BOGOTA, June 10 (Xinhua) -- At least eight workers died, four injured and over 30 more are missing in a landslide that occurred in northwestern Colombia on Thursday night, the country's office for disaster management (UNGRD) said Friday.

    The workers were building a highway along the Medellin-Quibdo road in the northwestern state of Choco when the landslide caused by intense rains in recent days tore through a section of the roadway, UNGRD said.

    Rescue efforts began in the early hours of Friday, with eight bodies having been found, before being briefly suspended due to the risk of provoking other landslides.

    "At the moment, eight people have been killed, four more have been injured, three machines have been destroyed and one road has been affected," said a UNGRD report issued on Friday afternoon.

    The UNGRD confirmed that over 30 workers are also still missing.

    One survivor, Heiler Chavarra, told Colombian daily El Tiempo that he saw the landslide move a bulldozer "almost 1,000 meters", adding that "all those nearby were caught by it."

    Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos wrote on Twitter that he "lamented the death of eight people in a landslide along the Medellin-Quibdo road" in the northwestern state of Choco.

  • Starr DiGiacomo

  • Howard

    Mudslide in Japan Sends House Toppling (Jun 30)

    A mudslide in the city of Nagasaki caused a house to topple over after heavy rain pounded southern Japan over the past week.

    Video showed the house falling over the mudslide and crashing atop other houses.

    Source

    http://globalnews.ca/news/2796479/mudslide-in-japan-sends-house-top...

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://localpress.co.in/2016/07/9-cars-crushed-wall-collapse-near-r...

    9 cars crushed in wall collapse near R-Mall, Thane

  • KM

    http://www.adn.com/alaska-news/2016/07/02/massive-landslide-crashes...

    Massive landslide crashes onto glacier in Southeast Alaska


    A 4,000-foot-high mountainside collapsed in Glacier Bay National Park June 28, 2016, in a massive landslide that spread debris and raised a dust cloud for miles across Lamplugh Glacier, seen in this photo taken the next day. (Courtesy Paul Swanstrom / Mountain Flying Service)

    More than 100 million tons of rock slid down a mountainside in Southeast Alaska on Tuesday morning, sending debris miles across a glacier below and a huge cloud of dust into the air, a scientist says.

    It's unclear what exactly caused the 4,000-foot-high mountainside to collapse northwest of Juneau in Glacier Bay National Park, but the mountains in the area are generally young, unstable and eroding quickly, said Colin Stark, a geophysicist at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in New York.

    "It rivals anything we've had in several years," Stark said Saturday.

    Stark said he plans to spend several days in Alaska during the coming week to study the landslide and collect photographs and samples.

    Stark studies the physics of landslides and described the one Tuesday as "exceptionally large." His team at Columbia discovered the landslide through seismic recordings.

    According to their preliminary analysis of the seismograms and available imagery, the landslide started at 8:21 a.m. Tuesday when the rock face collapsed on a high, steep slope. For nearly a minute the debris accelerated down the mountain, hitting the ice on Lamplugh Glacier and pushing up snow and ice as it continued across the glacier, Stark said.

    He said rough estimates put the size of the slide at about 130 million tons, comparable to roughly 60 million medium-size SUVs tumbling down the mountainside.

    "That's a lot of SUVs," Stark said. "It's huge."

    (Courtesy Paul Swanstrom / Mountain Flying Service)

    Paul Swanstrom, a pilot and owner of Haines-based Mountain Flying Service, saw the aftermath of the landslide from the sky Tuesday about two hours afterward.

    Swanstrom said the slide happened roughly 59 miles southwest of Haines. He was on a routine flightseeing tour when he noticed a cloud of dust over Lamplugh Glacier.

    "I could tell it was quite big," he said.

    Swanstrom said he has flown in Southeast Alaska for more than two decades and has come upon smaller landslides, but this one was massive.

    He called the park headquarters and took photographs for the next few days, better understanding the magnitude of the slide as the dust settled.

    Michael West, Alaska state seismologist and director of the Alaska Earthquake Center at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, said the landslide was equivalent to about a magnitude-5.5 earthquake.

    "That puts it into the range of things we see every several years," he said.

    Seismic waves from the landslide were measured as far away as Barrow and Nome.

    "It's a longer rumble than an earthquake, but it's a rumble," he said.

    (Courtesy Paul Swanstrom / Mountain Flying Service)

    West said Tuesday's landslide was particularly huge, but smaller ones are typical for that area of Southeast Alaska. The mountains there are some of the fastest-growing in the world, he said, partly because they are rebounding from the last ice age.

    "As that ice has melted away, the mountains have sort of floated, or are buoyed up because they've been unloaded," he said.

    He said the area's mountains are young, dynamic and eroding quickly — an unstable combination.

    Stark said he worries about the hazards created by the instability.

    About 10 miles away, the glacier ends in Johns Hopkins Inlet, a stop for cruise ships. Tuesday's landslide did not reach the inlet, but last fall a similarly sized landslide crashed into remote Taan Fiord, a finger of Icy Bay, and created a huge tsunami wave, Stark said.

    No humans were around, he said, but what if a cruise ship had been nearby?

    This part of Alaska is now firmly established as the global hotspot for rock avalanche activity. Recent events include the Tyndall Glacier Rock Avalanche, the Ferebee rock avalanche, the Mount La Perouse rock avalanche, the Mount Jarvis Rock avalanche and the Mount Lituya Rock Avalanche.  A detailed study is urgently needed to understand why this area is so active at present.

    http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2016/07/03/lamplugh-glacier-rock...

  • M. Difato

    East China gas pipeline was hit by a landslide .

    Wed Jul 20, 2016 http://uk.reuters.com/article/us-china-pipeline-fire-sinopec-corp-i...

    A fire on the central section of Sinopec's Sichuan-East China gas pipeline is under control and associated gas wells are being shut down, a company spokesperson said on Wednesday.

    Sinopec earlier said the pipeline had been hit by a landslide and caught fire. The company has shut down that section of the pipeline and is working to restore the facility.

    State news agency Xinhua initially reported the rupture of the pipeline, which carries natural gas from the southwestern province of Sichuan to eastern China.

    The incident had resulted in two fatalities, Xinhua said.

  • KM

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/aug/07/six-dead-in-mexico-as...


    Six dead in Mexico as Tropical Storm Earl triggers landslides

    Authorities continue to monitor rising rivers and saturated soil that could cause additional landslides


    Mexican soldiers help dig out damaged homes Soldiers help dig out damaged homes in Veracruz, Mexico. Six people died in the state when their homes were buried by landslides. Photograph: Eduardo Murillo/AFP/Getty Images

    Six people died in eastern Mexico when they were buried in landslides caused by intense rainfall from the remnants of now-down..., an emergency services official said.

    The six deaths involved two separate families in eastern Veracruz state, emergency services spokesman Manuel Escalera said.



    He added that local authorities were continuing to monitor rising rivers and saturated soil that could trigger additional landslides.

    Earl’s maximum wind speed dropped to 30mph (48km/h) by Saturday afternoon, according to the Miami-based National Hurricane Center.

    It was located approximately 105 miles (169km) east of Mexico City after pounding portions of Central America and crossing Mexico’s Yu...over the past few days.

    Forecasters were still warning the storm could produce dangerous flash floods and mudslides with rainfall up to 18 inches (45 cm) in some areas in the Mexican states of Guerrero, Hidalgo, Oaxaca, Puebla, Tlaxcula and Veracruz.

    The Mexican government discontinued the tropical storm warning and there were no coastal warnings or watches in effect.

    Before crossing into Mexico, Earl battered Belize, smashing car windows and punching holes in the roofs of Belize City’s wooden houses. It also downed trees and flooded parts of the coast.

  • Howard

    Massive Landslide Blocks River in India, Thousands Evacuated (Aug 13)

    Thousands of homes are at risk after a massive landslide dumped tones of debris and created a dam on the Kanka River in Sikkim on Saturday morning.

    The artificial lake, estimated to be 150 ft wide, is likely to burst and would release an enormous volume of water into the neighboring Teesta River causing a catastrophic flood for people living downstream.

    Five houses were immediately submerged and around 300 meters of road was buried as a result of the landslide.

    An alert has been sounded in the low-lying areas on both sides of the border and entire villages are being evacuated.

    Once the dam starts leaking, thousands of residents in Teesta Bazaar and 29 Mile will have only a few hours to get to safety. Evacuating these densely populated areas will be a logistical nightmare.

    Aug 16 Update

    Sources

    http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Dam-burst-threat-after-lan...

    http://www.business-standard.com/article/pti-stories/landslide-bloc...

    http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2016/08/13/dzongu-1/

    http://savethehills.blogspot.ca/2016/08/landslide-dam-in-north-sikk...

    https://www.facebook.com/TheDarjeelingChronicle/photos/a.3181390649...

    http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2016/08/19/dzongu-landslide-dam/

  • Howard

    Gigantic Rockslide in Northern Italy (Aug 18)

    An extremely large rockfall occurred over two days between 18th and 20th August in the northern Italian Dolomites.

    The estimated volume of displaced rock is between 600,000 and 700,000 cubic metres.

    The rockfall was located at Kleine Gaisl (Piccola Croda Rossa), a 2859-meter mountain in the Braies Valley in the South Tyrol in the northern Italian Dolomites.

    The rockfall had been anticipated as a large tension crack had been observed prior to the collapse event.

    Roman Valentini, a mountain guide who works in the area had this to say about it:

    "I’ve never seen anything quite like it. It looked like a river in spate, with rocks half the size of houses tumbling down."

    Sources

    http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2016/08/23/kleine-gaisl-1/

    http://www.planetmountain.com/en/news/alpinism/dolomites-impressive...

  • Starr DiGiacomo

  • Derrick Johnson

    Incredible avalanche tumbles down a mountainside in India – and intrigued researches run TOWARDS it in their excitement .

    • Footage shows avalanche tumbling down mountain in India
    • Researchers gasp in awe at the incredible avalanche
    • And rather than running away they run towards it 

    This is the shocking moment researchers in India ran towards an avalanche rather than trying to escape it.

    Footage shows a group of researchers standing on a mountain in Zanskar, India.

    An avalanche begins to pour down a nearby mountain, leading them to gasp.

    One of the researchers whispers 'whoa' as the avalanche begins to fall.

    Another says: 'That's insane' while a third whispers: 'S***'.

    'It's so big' says another as they move to get closer to the avalanche. 

    The terrifying behemoth makes its way all the way down the mountain.

    But one very brave researcher runs to a nearby rock to get a closer look of the avalanche, defying danger.

    It is not known if anyone was injured in the avalanche

    Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3776131/Incredible-avalanch...

  • Howard

    Famous Rock Archway Collapses in Morocco (Sep 25)One of two archways regarded as natural wonders collapsed at Morocco's Legzira beach.

    A pile of red rubble was all that was left after the natural wonder near the city of Sidi Ifni, 93 miles (150km) south of Agadir.

    Often cited as one of the world’s most beautiful beaches, Legzira is famous for sunsets punctuated by the rock structures jutting out from the cliffs.

    They were formed over thousands of years by erosion.

    It is not known what caused the collapse. A large crack appeared on the southern face of the arch in March after a chunk of it fell off, Ifnipress reported.

    The second, larger arch remains standing further along the beach.

    Source

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/sep/25/morocco-legzira-beach...

  • Tracie Crespo

    www.crcconnection.com/2016/10/08/dozens-missing-in-eastern-china-af...

    Dozens missing in eastern China after landslides

    Dozens missing in eastern China after landslides

    "Now the whole family is safe, but 2 tonnes of rice that were drying outside has been lost", state run Xinhua news agency reported.

    As of yesterday afternoon, 15 people had been rescued and 20 others remained missing.

    At least 32 people are missing in south eastern China after heavy rains triggered two major landslides.

    In Taiwan, five people died in falls and other accidents during the storm, and the bodies of three people were discovered in a home swamped by a landslide in southern Kaohsiung county.

    The largest number of victims is in the province of Zhejiang, where the landslide has ruined 20 houses in Sucun village of Suichang County.

    Xia Baolong, secretary of the provincial committee of the Communist Party of China, arrived at the village on Friday morning for rescue command and to comfort the affected residents and rescuers.

    Megi made landfall earlier Wednesday in mainland China's Fujian province, less than 24 hours after it devastated Taiwan.

    Mountainous Zhejiang, along with its neighbouring provinces, are frequently hit by typhoons at this time of year and are also highly susceptible to landslides. Several hundred rescue personnel had been dispatched to Suichang from around the area, the local government said. Taiwan's Central Emergency Operation Center noted around 4,300 people in temporary shelters, while more than 14,800 were evacuated from their homes.

    Landslide slams into Chinese village was posted in World of TheNews International - https://www.thenews.com.pk on September 29, 2016 and was last updated on September 29, 2016.

    Although her identity was not initially known, a person claiming to be a relative said the woman's husband had bought her the pork bun from FamilyMart, a local convenience store.

    The heavy rains came with Typhoon Megi, which hit China on Wednesday.

    Megi is the third typhoon to hit Taiwan in two weeks.

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.dolphnsix.com/news/1617212/least-dead-after-mudslide-bur...

    Mudslide Buries Colombian Highway, Vehicles, Killing Several

    Published Oct 27 2016 12:09 PM EDT

    At least 7 people are dead in a 600-foot mudslide in Colombia.

    Rescue efforts are continuing, with government officials reporting that at least six vehicles were buried on the highway.

    The highway is expected to remain closed for days while rescue efforts and clean up continues.

    A 650+ foot mudslide struck a stretch of Colombian highway Wednesday morning, killing at least 7, burying multiple vehicles and four lanes of highway, authorities said.

    Search and rescue efforts were ongoing at the scene, near the village of El Cabuyal, where government officials said that at least 6 vehicles had been buried by the torrent of debris

    A total of 9 people are still reportedly missing in the disaster. More than 50,000 cubic meters of land was displaced by the mudslide, which also took out multiple power lines en route to the highway.

    It could take several days for the highway to reopen, government officials said.

    The local government attributed the mudslide to recent rains in the area. Weather data is sparse in this particular region of Colombia, but nearby weather stations reported consecutive days of rain earlier this month.

    The stretch of impacted highway connects the Colombian capital of Bogotá to Medellín, the capital city of the mountainous province of Antioquia.

  • KM

    https://watchers.news/2016/11/11/quick-clay-landslide-quebec-novemb...

    Impressive quick clay landslide in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Canada


    Impressive quick clay landslide in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Canada


    An impressive quick clay landslide occurred in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, Canada on November 10, 2016. Several homes were evacuated, although, luckily, no injuries were reported.

    A massive portion of land fell into a stream that flows into the St. Lawrence River. According to media reports, the affected region is about 200 m (656.2 feet) wide. Several homes along the St-Joseph Row were evacuated.

    Massive landslide in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, November 10, 2016

    Large quick clay landslide in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, November 10, 2016. Image credit: Elizabeth Laplante (via Twitter)

    Massive landslide in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, November 10, 2016

    Large quick clay landslide in St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, November 10, 2016. 

    According to Dave Petley of The Landslide Blog (AGU), the landslide shape, of a narrow outlet and large bowl, along with the high mobility of the wet, muddy debris, indicates it was likely a case of classic quick clay landslide. No instability signs in the field have been detected at the site in 2013, according to images taken by Google Earth.

    The site of landslide at St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, Google Earth 2013 image. Image credit: Google Earth

    The site of the landslide at St-Luc-de-Vincennes, Quebec, Google Earth 2013 image. 

    However, the expert noticed an active landslide is present at the toe of the failure, where the debris has entered the stream. This suggests the landslide has retrogressed and then triggered the runaway quick clay landslide.

    View image on TwitterView image on Twitter

  • Howard

    New Zealand Quake Causes 100,000 Landslides (Nov 14)

    The now-named Kaikoura Earthquake triggered up to 100,000 landslides in Northern Canterbury and southern Marlborough.

    The largest of them, brought down on the south side of the Clarence River mouth in the wake of the overnight 7.5 quake, brought down an estimated one million cubic metres.

    Tonight, GNS Science reported that like other quakes, this one, first registering near Culverden, appeared to have involved jumping from one fault rupture to another in a complex pattern.

    This compound style of rupture was a feature of the magnitude 7.1 Darfield quake of 2010 where up to eight neighbouring faults ruptured almost simultaneously.

    At daybreak today three GNS geologists took to the air in helicopters to make observations of quake damage in the North Canterbury-Marlborough region.

    They described the huge Clarence River landslide as the biggest landslide in New Zealand since the Young River landslide near Wanaka in 2007.

    The number and distribution of landslides is considered consistent with the severity of the ground shaking.

    They also observed numerous surface fault ruptures, blocked rivers, and a section of the main north-south railway line shunted sideways by at least two metres.

    Numerous landslides were blocking main highways and rail tunnels, as well as a starling seabed rise on the beach.

    Sources

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=1...

    http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2016/11/14/kaikoura-earthquake-1/

    https://twitter.com/lou_gordongreen/status/798011354548293632

    http://info.geonet.org.nz/display/quake/2016/11/18/Landslides+and+L...

  • Howard

    Dramatic Landslide Strikes Malaysia (Nov 26) 

    Evacuations orders are in place for 340 Serendah residents following a terrifying landslide event that opened a 500-meter wide crater.

    It was a traumatic experience for stall owner Normah Ninggal, 48, when she heard a loud noise and witnessed several cars parked next to her food stall disappear into the ground.

    Shocked, she and her children ran as fast as they could towards their house nearby while the ground continued to shake, revealing a large crater.

    "My children and I just ran towards our house and we can see the trees shaking and the ground suddenly opened up and caved in.

    Another resident, Amirul Hakim, 18, said he was stunned and literally froze up upon seeing the stalls and cars falling into the massive crater one after another.

    "It was a shocking sight. We can even hear the soil moving..."

    Mohd Fakhurrazi Yusof's wife called him at work to tell him “a tree had fallen” near their home in Taman Idaman, Serendah.

    He was shocked to find a huge part of his neighbourhood had been swallowed up in a massive 500m-wide crater, and his house was just inches away.

    His bedroom window had a clear view of the gaping hole that left a neighbour injured and swallowed at least 10 cars.

    Sources

    http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/residents-ordere...

    http://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2016/11/27/fallen-tree-turns-...

    http://www.nst.com.my/news/2016/11/192055/serendah-residents-recall...

    http://www.nst.com.my/news/2016/11/192045/landslide-area-declared-r...

  • Howard

    Hundreds Evacuated in Central China after Massive Ground Fissures Appear (Dec 9)

    More than 400 villagers have been evacuated after huge cracks and cave-ins appeared in Jingmen City, in central China’s Hubei province.

    Wide cracks stretching up to hundreds of meters suddenly appeared early Saturday morning. Fish ponds dried up, buildings collapsed and roads gave way, after land subsidence extended across most parts of the village.

    "We woke up hearing a huge noise, like a bomb going off. I turned on the light and found the house cracking. We took our kids and ran out barely wearing any clothes."

    Local authorities immediately cordoned off the village.

    Source

    http://english.cctv.com/2016/12/14/VIDEEM5AxLlga86wo9r9XBKb161214.s...

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.fijitimes.com/story.aspx?id=382585

    Landslide sweeps homes to sea

    LUKE RAWALAI
    Sunday, December 18, 2016

    Update: 1:51PM Houses were swept to sea in a massive landslide in Dreketi village on Qamea island.

    Thirty two year old villager Paulo Sakaraia described the experience as a nightmare and said people had to flee for their lives at 6am.

    He said the landslide occurred after heavy rain caused a massive landslide. 

    "It was lucky that the landslide happened at 6am this morning while there was a bit of light and people could find their way out of their homes," he said. 

    "More than half of the village is covered in soil and debris and it is very hard to move around the village."

    "A few of the old people in the village and young children have been moved to the neighbouring settlement of Natakala as we speak."

    Mr Sakaraia said that villagers with relatives on the island of Taveuni have been ferried across this morning.

    He added the nursing station and the school were pushed to the sea.

    District Officer Taveuni, Taveuni Kalivati Rabuka who serves Qamea and nearby northern islands had left for the island when contacted for a comment.

  • jorge namour

    Dozens trapped under mud after coal mine collapses in India

    December 30, 2016

    http://edition.cnn.com/2016/12/30/asia/mine-collapse-india/index.html

    (CNN)A huge open-pit coal mine has collapsed in eastern India, trapping at least 30 people and killing at least seven, police officials say.

    Hari Lal Chouhan, Superintendent of Police in Godda, where the mine is located, said seven bodies have been pulled out of the debris so far. The exact number of those feared trapped is unknown.
    He added that as many as 20 vehicles have been buried in the landslide.

    The cause of the landslide is still being investigated.

    Catastrophe struck the vast mine Thursday evening local time, but rescue teams were unable to start their operation straight away due to a lack of technology, according to police officials.
    Mining operations were reportedly taking place 200 feet beneath the ground.
    Mr. Chouhan confirmed that a National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) team were now traveling to the site to help dig through the mud. CONTINUE...

    MAP::https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godda

  • Howard

    Arctic Coastlines Collapsing Over 20 Meters Per Year (Jan 5)

    Thawing permafrost in the Arctic is leading to coasts disintegrating into the sea at a rate of up to 22 meters a year in some areas.

    The large quantities of ice in Arctic coastal soils help to hold the land together, and when temperatures rise the land starts to fall apart. As well as land, archaeological remains and ancient frozen animal bodies and plants are also washed into the sea.

    The retreat of the coastlines is also flooding shallow Arctic waters with both nutrients and pollutants, scientists say an article in the journal Nature Climate Change. While there is already evidence of how animals such as polar bears are being affected by climate change, very little is known about what effect coastal collapse will have on Arctic marine life. The loss of land and permafrost is also having a profound effect on people's livelihoods in the Arctic.

    One coast retreating fast is that of Herschel Island off the coast of Canada in the Beaufort Sea. At Herschel, thawed permafrost is collapsing in the form of mudslides, spreading out into the coastal waters in sediment plumes stretching for miles.

    There is very little data available across Arctic coastlines at the moment, so scientists are using Herschel Island as a model to try to understand what might happen elsewhere. Study author Michael Fritz of the Alfred Wegener Institute's Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research in Germany says that the island, which retreats by up to 22 metres a year, is a good indicator for how the coasts of other Arctic nations could be faring. Countries that have permafrost coastlines in the Arctic include the US, Canada, Russia and Greenland.

    "We have very little data at the moment. Only about 2% of the Arctic coasts are actually classified – so for those we know how high the cliff is, what is the sediment, what is the geology, what is the carbon content, what are the nutrients and pollutants in the soil," Fritz told IBTimes UK.

    As 34% of coasts in the world are permafrost – around 253,000 miles – Fritz said that we can expect to see more mudslides across the Arctic region.

    "We can until now only guess the implications for the food chain," he said. However, there are several ways that Fritz says it might be affected.

    The soil from the melted permafrost deposits a large quantity of organic material in the water, which is broken down by microorganisms, releasing more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The nutrients released can also fuel the growth of algal blooms, depleting oxygen in the water and potentially killing fish and other sea animals.

    Fritz and his colleagues are calling for a concerted international effort to study Arctic coastlines. There has been little research on this previously due to the inaccessibility of many of the coasts, and it can be politically challenging to study the area.

    Source

    http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/arctic-coastlines-turn-mudslides-they-coll...

  • Howard

    1000 Evacuated, 2 Dead After Enormous Mudslides Hit Northern Argentina (Jan 10)

    About 1000 people have been evacuated in the northern Argentine province of Jujuy after a mudslide killed two women and injured at least five other people.

    The towns of Volcan and Tumbaya were the communities most heavily affected by the mudslide on Tuesday.

    Two stretches of Highway 9, one of the main roads through the region, were washed out.

    The two women were found Tuesday inside a vehicle that had overturned and on Wednesday, Red Cross authorities confirmed that five people were injured in assorted incidents in the area.

    The landslide also affected the Dakar road race, which had to suspend its ninth phase and adjust its route because of poor weather conditions and the cutting of Highway 9.

    A detour of some 200 km had to be implemented for the majority of the vehicles in the competition.

    The evacuated people "are being transported to five ... centres, two in San Salvador de Jujuy and three in Volcan," according to Argentine Red Cross communications director Natalia Gennero.

    Sources

    http://www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objecti...

    http://blogs.agu.org/landslideblog/2017/01/12/volcan-1/

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/killed-10-missing-cen...

    2 Killed, 10 Missing in Central China Landslide

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://sciencythoughts.blogspot.com/2017/01/homes-abandoned-after-l...

    Saturday, 28 January 2017

    Homes abandoned after landslide in San Mateo County, California.

    Three homes have had to be abandoned after a landslide at La Honda in San Mateo County, California this week. Home owners started to notice cracks in walls on Monday 23 January 2017, which grew during the next two days, till the road beneath the properties buckled on Wednesday 25 January. The properties have been red tagged (declared unsafe for habitation) by local authorities, leaving the homeowners unclear as to their future.
     
    One of the properties in La Honda, California, that has been declared unsafe following a landslide this week. Aaron Kinney/Bay Area News Group.
     
    The La Honda area is notoriously prone to landslips, which have apparently been happening for the last few thousand years, despite the overall relief of the area being  quite low. These typically involve blocks of topsoil moving downslope after rainfall events, rather than deeper rock-events triggered by the state's complex seismic situation.
    This week's incident happened after several weeks of heavy rainfall and winter storms that have affected much of California, with almost a meter of rain having fallen in the La Honda area already this month, and states of emergency being declared in 50 of the state's 58 counties. Landslides are a common problem after severe weather events, as excess pore water pressure can overcome cohesion in soil and sediments, allowing them to flow like liquids. Approximately 90% of all landslides are caused by heavy rainfall.

     Road below the houses damaged by the January 2017 La Honda landslip. Josie Lepe/Bay Area News Group.

    California has been battered by a succession of Pacific storms this winter, bringing widespread flooding and triggering a number of landslip and subsidence events. This is due to exceptionally high temperatures over the Pacific Ocean off the coast of the state this year due to a La Niña weather system over the southern Pacific; ocean storms form due to heating of air over the sea, as the air is heated the the air pressure drops and the air rises, causing new air to rush in from outside the forming storm zone. If this zone is sufficiently large, then it will be influenced by the Coriolis Effect, which loosely speaking means the winds closer to the equator will be faster than those further away, causing the storm to rotate, clockwise in the northern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the southern hemisphere.

    Whilst the high winds associated these storms is extremely dangerous, the real danger from such storms is often the flooding. Each millibar drop in air pressure can lead to a 1 cm rise in sea level, and large storms can be accompanied by storm surges several meters high. This tends to be accompanied by high levels of rainfall, caused by water picked up by the storm while still at sea, which can lead to flooding, swollen rivers and landslides; which occur when waterlogged soils on hill slopes lose their cohesion and slump downwards, over whatever happens to be in their path.

     The approximate location of the January 2017 La Honda landslip. Google Maps.
    The La Niña weather system is the opposite of the El Niño weather system, in which unusually cold surface temperatures spread across the equatorial Pacific from the upwelling zone on the South American coast. This traps warm water from the western Pacific, preventing it from spreading east and warming the central Pacific. This leads to lower evaporation over the (cooler) east Pacific, leading to low rainfall on the west coast of South America, and higher evaporation over the (warmer) west Pacific, leading to higher rainfall over East and Southeast Asia and northern Australia.
    The effects of a La Niña weather system in December-February. NOAA.
    This also leads to a breakdown in surface circulation in the North Pacific, which generally rotates clockwise, so that the same body of water stays off the coast of California, where it is constantly warmed by the Sun, leading to high levels of evaporation and onshore winds that bring high rainfall and flood events to the state.
    The effect of the La Niña weather system on the weather of North America. NOAA.
  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.thebigwobble.org/2017/01/iconic-hollywood-hills-landslid...

    Iconic Hollywood Hills landslide knocks power out for hundreds as house slides down hillside

    Tuesday, 31 January 2017

    Photo NBC Los Angeles

    Five homes were evacuated and power was knocked out to hundreds of people after a hillside collapsed Monday evening in a Hollywood Hills neighborhood.
    The mudslide occurred before 5:30 p.m. in the 8100 block of West Laurel View Drive.
    According to the Los Angeles Fire Department, three homes were directly affected by the mudslide. The backyard of one of the homes slid down a hillside, crossed Laurel View Drive and went into the front yards of two other homes.
    In the process, the mudslide damaged power lines and buried at least one vehicle, LAFD said.
    There were no reported injuries.

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    https://lostcoastoutpost.com/2017/feb/9/landslide-makes-wilder-ridg...

    (VIDEO) Landslide Makes Wilder Ridge Road go Bye-Bye

    http://https://twitter.com/surveyoron/status/829801937398697984?ref...

    A landslide near Honeydew has completely washed away a massive chunk of concrete formerly known as Wilder Ridge Road.

    Kym Kemp’s coverage of the slide on February 3, shows photos of the road cracking and bucking in the area. But the road appeared to be mostly intact.

    New Video Tweeted out by Humboldt County Surveyor Ronald Garton this afternoon shows that the slide has since washed the stretch of roadway right into a nearby creek.

    Humboldt County Public works closed this road prior to the most recent slide.

    Check out the road’s current condition in the gnarly footage posted above.

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.smh.com.au/world/landslide-in-bali-hits-homes-kills-and-...

    Landslide in Bali hits homes, kills and injures several

    Jakarta: Twelve people including children have been killed and others seriously injured in landslides in three villages in the Bali regency of Bangli after torrential rain on Thursday night.

    One of the landslides,

    The landslide flattened homes in Bali.

    The landslide flattened homes in Bali. Photo: BNPB/Twitter

    National Disaster Management Agency (BNPB) spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said the landslide was caused by a combination of rain and the condition of slopes with many settlements.

    He said seven people had been killed, two injured seriously and two received minor injuries.

    A search and rescue team had evacuated the casualties

    Indonesian authorities have released the names of those killed in the landslide.

    All the victims from Songan were Indonesian. One family lost a 33-year-old woman, her seven-year-old daughter and one-year-old son.

    "Landslides happen almost every year in Bali and cost lives," Mr Sutopo said. "Spatial planning must be enforced. Public education must be intensified."

    Four fatalities also occurred in Awan and one in Sukawana. Both are also villages in the regency of Bangli.

    Mr Sutopo said extreme rain, with 145 millimetres in one day, had occurred in the regency of Karangasem on Wednesday.

    He said heavy rain was predicted to continue in Bangli, Jembrana, Buleleng, Tabanan, Gianyar and Badung in Bali until Saturday.

    "People are encouraged to be vigilant of landslides, floods and tornados," he said.

    The Indonesian Red Cross, the military, police and volunteers were on site providing emergency care .

    "All victims have been successfully evacuated," Mr Sutopo said.

  • jorge namour

    Cerro HILL cedes and buries at least five homes in the south of La Paz - BOLIVIA

    15 February 2017

    http://www.la-razon.com/ciudades/Cerro-sepulta-viviendas-zona-Sur-L...

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=es&tl=en&js=y&...

    Gliding of a hill in the zone of Low Auquisamaña in the south zone of La Paz. Photo: La Razón
    Fire, Mayor and Police personnel laid a security fence and began to work. The mayor of La Paz, Luis Revilla, reported that the initial data rule out the existence of personal injury

    At least five houses were in ruins after being buried by the landslide of part of a hill in the area of ​​Auquisamaña Bajo, in the South of La Paz. The mayor of La Paz, Luis Revilla, reported that initial reports dismiss personal injury.

    Fire, Mayor and Police personnel worked in the area and laid a security fence. The electric power was cut because the collapse also took electric wiring poles.

    The earth movement persisted past 16.30. The neighbors attribute the fact to the movement of earth in the high part and to a filtration.

    MAP : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bolivia

  • KM

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4371066/Overflowing-river-C...

    Colombia declares state of emergency after 'avalanche of water' triggered by a landslide smashes through rural city killing at least 193 people as the president warns the death toll will rise 

    • Incident triggered by intense rains left at least 220 missing and 400 people injured in the city of Mocoa
    • Emergency response workers have been continuing the search for survivors after river flooded at midnight 
    • A surgeon said there could be as many as 300 injured and doctors in the area were running out of blood 
    • President Juan Manuel Santos declared a state of emergency in the city when he visited the area

    An overflowing river has killed at least 193 people and injured 400 more as an avalanche of water destroyed families' homes.

    The incident triggered by intense rains caused devastation in Mocoa, near Colombia's border with Ecuador, according to the country's president.

    Juan Manuel Santos has declared a state of emergency in the city.  

    Carlos Ivan Marquez with Colombia's national disaster agency says the river flooded around midnight, catching unsuspecting residents off guard in the early Saturday hours.

    Aftermath: Colombia flooding completely destroys roads and home
    A landslide in Colombia has killed at least 193 people and injured 400 as avalanches of water destroyed families' homes. Pictured, members of the Colombian Army carrying a victim of the mudslides in Mocoa, near the Ecuadorian border
    The incident was triggered by intense rains, and the midnight flood took many residents by surprise. The fast-moving river cut down trees and buildings in the southern region of the country. Pictured, survivors look at the damage caused by the flood

    The incident was triggered by intense rains, and the midnight flood took many residents by surprise. The fast-moving river cut down trees and buildings in the southern region of the country. Pictured, survivors look at the damage caused by the flood

    Muddy water and debris quickly surged through the city's streets, toppling homes, ripping trees from their roots, lifting cars and trucks and carrying them downstream. 

    Many of the residents did not have enough time to climb on top of their roofs or seek refuge on higher ground.

    At least 220 people are missing after the incident.  

    President Juan Manuel Santos warned the death toll could continue to rise.

    Pictured, a child is carried to safety by a soldier in Mocoa. At least 220 people are thought to be missing

    Aerial photographs show how the river burst its banks and flooded Mocoa overnight on Saturday. Muddy water and debris quickly surged through the city's streets, toppling homes, ripping trees from their roots, lifting cars and trucks downstream

    He said: 'We don't know how many there are going to be. We're still looking.'

    Police commander Colonel Omar Bonilla told radio station Caracol earlier: 'At this time we have removed 93 bodies. We have adults, women and infants.' 

    Herman Granados, a surgeon at the local hospital, said he believed there are likely to be more than 300 people injured and that doctors were quickly running out of blood. He suspected the death toll would rise.

    He said: 'Under the mud, I am sure there are many more.'

    Mocoa Mayor Jose Antonia Castro said: 'It's a big area. A big portion of the many houses were just taken by the avalanche but above all the people were warned with enough time and they were able to get out but houses in 17 neighborhoods have basically been erased.'

    He also said two bridges were destroyed.

    A man who escaped with his wife and 7-month-old baby said there was hardly any time to flee before the water came rushing in.

    Eduardo Vargas was awoken by the sound of neighbors banging on his door and quickly fled with his family amid the sound of people crying in panic. They climbed up a small mountain to safety before their home destroyed.

    Returning to the site Saturday, he said there is, 'Nothing left. But thank God we have our lives.'

    Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos visited the site of the disaster and declared a state of emergency on Saturday

    Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos visited the site of the disaster and declared a state of emergency on Saturday

    Pictured, a group of soldiers use a tree log to help haul victims from the wreckage around the city. Surgeon Herman Granados thinks as many as 300 people could be injured in the incident

    Pictured, a group of soldiers use a tree log to help haul victims from the wreckage around the city. Surgeon Herman Granados thinks as many as 300 people could be injured in the incident

  • M. Difato

    Indonesian landslide (Apr 1) buries up to 27

    http://oakridgeobserver.com/2017/04/04/indonesian-landslide-buries-...

    Seventeen people were injured and sent for treatment to a local hospital, the national disaster agency spokesman said as the military, police and volunteers worked to score the area for the missing.

    One body was found before the search was suspended as rain started to fall. He said that 27 people were still missing, while local army chief Lieutenant Colonel Slamet Sarijanto claimed that at least 38 people were buried in the debris.

    This is published unedited from the PTI feed.

    "Signs of possible landslides were actually felt by villagers for the past 20 days, with some cracks seen on the rocky hill in the village", Sutopo said.

    The landslide hit some 23 houses and farmers harvesting ginger at Banaran village in East Java's Ponorogo district.

    Saturday's disaster in Banaran village have forced some 300 people to flee home and take shelters at relatives' houses, he said.

    Heavy downpours on Sunday forced rescuers to halt search and rescue operation for the victims of Saturday's landslides in western Indonesia, disaster agency official said.

    The landslide over turned vehicles buried buildings and washed away the rich vegetation on the hillside...."

    ~

  • KM

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4399288/Man-captures-incred...

    The incredible moment a mountain COLLAPSES in Malibu, sending rocks and debris flying and covering cars below in a cloud of dirt

    • Lloyd Cotsen filmed a 'dirt waterfall' when a mountain collapsed in Malibu
    • At first there is a small trickle of dirt before a large chunk of rock falls
    • No one appears to have been injured from the falling rocks

    This is the incredible moment a mountainside collapsed and fell on top of several cars in a crowded parking lot 

    Dust and rubble filled the air after the 'dirt waterfall' near Zuma Beach in Malibu, California.

    At first there is a trickle of dust falling off the mountain like a stream. Lloyd Cotsen noticed this and pulled out his camera to film the incoming collapse.

    Lloyd Cotsen filmed the moment a trickle of falling rocks turned into a 'dirt waterfall'
    Meanwhile, oblivious surfers walk by unaware of the impending rock slide

    Lloyd Cotsen filmed the moment a trickle of falling rocks turned into a 'dirt waterfall'

    Meanwhile, oblivious surfers walk by unaware of the impending rock slide. 

    A beach-goer notices how close their car is to the crumbling mountain and decides to move their car.

    After a minute the amount of rocks and dust begins pouring, a large chunk of the mountain becomes unhinged and plummets down the side.

    'That's a new landscape': In a minute the rock slide transformed the mountain 

    'That's a new landscape': In a minute the rock slide transformed the mountain 

    'Holy sugar,' declares an astonished woman nearby.

    Cotsen says at the end of the video: 'I caught it all on video too. That might be better than the whales.'

    'Holy moly, that's a new landscape.' 

    Lawn furniture tumbled down the mountain after the end of the video. No one appears to have been injured.  

    Costen told Storyful: 'I was just waiting with my friends who were loading up their paddle boards and noticed the “dirt waterfall”. So, I turned my camera on it just while I was talking to my friends. If they had left sooner, I would have missed it.'

  • Tracie Crespo

    http://www.abcfoxmontana.com/story/35136020/watch-mudslide-on-highw...

    www.abcfoxmontana.com/story/35136020/watch-mudslide-on-highway-95-n...

    WATCH: Mudslide on Highway 95 near Bonners Ferry caught on camera

    Posted: Apr 12, 2017 4:45 PM EDTUpdated: Apr 12, 2017 5:08 PM EDT

    BONNERS FERRY, Idaho -

    Flaggers are directing traffic on Highway 95 south of Bonners Ferry after a mudslide covered the road last Friday. 

    The slide was caught on camera and the video shows tons of mud, rocks and trees giving way and pushing two layers of concrete barriers off the road. The Idaho Department of Transportation says in all, 800 cubic yards of debris covered the road. 

    No one was injured in the slide. 

    IDT says Land Surveyor Mathew Wilson (who shot the video) was assessing the hillside stability when he heard popping and cracking. Knowing a slide was imminent, flaggers on scene quickly stopped traffic and minutes later the hillside gave way. 

    Debris was cleared by Friday evening, but as of Wednesday, one lane of the highway is closed as the hillside remains unstable. 

    Several areas of North Idaho are impacted by this year's historic winter precipitation. Slides have occurred on Idaho State Highways 3, 5, 57, and 97, according to IDT. 

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://strangesounds.org/2017/04/landslide-destroys-seven-story-bui...

    The building accommodates 39 people from 11 households. An initial investigation showed that eight people were missing.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aTnGsOXmgMM

  • jorge namour

    Hautes-Alpes: Several hectares of mountain threaten to collapse

    15 April 2017,

    https://translate.google.com/translate?sl=fr&tl=en&js=y&...

    Since Monday, the Pas de l'ours, at Aiguilles, threatens to collapse. Rockfall and deformation of the roadway were observed by the patroller of the roads department of the department.

    A landslide threatens the commune of Aiguilles, in the Hautes-Alpes. Indeed, since Monday, several hectares of mountain are about to collapse, reports Le Dauphiné Libéré.

    Concrete slides were laid near the departmental road 947, which serves the villages of Ristolas and Abriès. Rock falls have already been observed, as well as deformations of the roadway.

    PHOTO FROM LINK:

    http://www.ledauphine.com/hautes-alpes/2017/04/14/un-pan-de-montagn...

  • M. Difato

    Landslide halts Amtrak’s Seattle-Portland trains, adding to West Coast rail stoppage (May 5)
    http://www.seattletimes.com/life/travel/landslide-halts-amtraks-sea...

    Hoping to take the train south from Seattle? Right now, you just can’t get there from here.

    Amtrak suspended its Amtrak Cascades train service between Seattle and Portland early Friday due to a landslide on the tracks. BNSF Railway, which owns the tracks, has placed a 48-hour moratorium on their use, suspending rail traffic on the route through Saturday, May 6.

    Debbie Buchwach, of Tualatin, Ore., said her daughter, Lauren Brown, 23, and friend Jasper Owens, of Washougal, were on the train bound for Seattle Thursday evening when it stopped south of Olympia and sat for about four hours before arriving at the Olympia station around 10:45 p.m. From there, Brown and Owens caught an Uber ride to their destination, the Crypticon convention in SeaTac. The Uber ride cost $90, $20 more than the cost of their two train tickets to Seattle.

    Friday, Amtrak arranged for bus transportation for ticketed passengers. Between Seattle and Portland buses were available for Trains 507, 508, 509, 513 and 516, an Amtrak official said. On Saturday, buses are available as an alternative for all scheduled trains on the route. Normal rail operations continue north of Seattle and south of Portland to Eugene, Ore.

    Meanwhile, a service cancellation of the Coast Starlight train between Seattle and Los Angeles is expected to continue through mid-May because of bridge damage that occurred as a result of a freight train derailment near Redding, California, on April 25. The Coast Starlight is operating according to its normal schedule between Los Angeles and Sacramento only...."

  • M. Difato

    Massive landslide covers Highway 1 in southern Big Sur (May20)

     http://www.montereyherald.com/article/NF/20170522/NEWS/170529949

    Big Sur >> Caltrans said Monday its unclear how long Highway 1 in southern Big Sur will remain closed after a landslide covering between a quarter and a half mile brought millions of cubic yards of dirt and rock down the hillside at Mud Creek on Saturday.

    According to Caltrans spokeswoman Susana Cruz, there are five active landslides in the area, which is about 9 miles north of the southern Monterey County border. It’s believed four of the slides came down together at about 9:30 p.m. Saturday. Springs in the area keep the soil muddy, she said.

    “There was so much saturation and so much weight,” Cruz said..."

    http://www.msn.com/en-ca/weather/topstories/landslide-on-california...

  • KM

    http://indianexpress.com/article/world/sri-lanka-25-killed-42-missi...

    Sri Lanka: At least 25 feared killed, 42 missing in flood and mudslide

    A team of 400 soldiers have been rushed to the rescue and help of over 7,800 people who have been affected by the calamity.

    Sri Lanka, Lanka landslide, Lanka mudslide, Lanka flood, lanka flood deaths, Lanka rainfall, Lanka news, latest news, world news, indian express newsLocals gather to watch rescue operation in Bellana village in Kalutara district, Sri Lanka, Friday. 

    At least 25 people were killed and 42 went missing in Sri Lanka due to floods and mudslides caused by torrential rainfall on Friday. A team of 400 soldiers have been rushed to the rescue of over 7,800 people who have been affected by the calamity.

    Sri Lanka, Lanka landslide, Lanka mudslide, Lanka flood, lanka flood deaths, Lanka rainfall, Lanka news, latest news, world news, indian express newsSri Lankans watch military rescue efforts at the site of a landslide in Bellana village in Kalutara district, Sri Lanka, Friday, May 26, 2017. 

    According to a Reuters report, at least five landslides have been reported in Kaluthara, which is the worst-hit district on the west coast of the Lankan island. This is the time of the year when the island nation witnesses highest rainfall, from the month of May to September. As the rescue operations continue, Home Affairs Minister Vajira Abeywardana has issued a warning that the situation can worsen in the next 72 hours,

  • Howard

    Extreme Mudslide in Northern Tajikistan (May 28)

    A late spring thaw in the mountains of northern Tajikistan unleashed an enormous mudslide on May 28, sending torrents of debris into a river and partly blocking the road to Kyrgyzstan.

    Source

    https://www.rferl.org/a/tajikistan-landslide/28516667.html

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.wsaz.com/content/news/Mudslide-brings-down-power-lines-c...

    Mudslide brings down power lines, closes road



    LKVIEW, W.Va. (WSAZ) -- Crews are working to remove debris from the roadway after a mudslide on Monday morning.

    It happened just after 11 a.m. at the intersection of Little Sandy Road and Elk River Road.

    Metro 911 Dispatchers say the mud slide brought down power lines.

    All lanes are blocked at this time.

    The Pinch Volunteer Fire Department, West Virginia Department of Highways and Kanawha County Sheriff's Department are all responding to the scene.

    No injuries were reported in the slide.

  • Kojima

    Earthquake in Greenland triggers fatal landslide-induced tsunami

    POSTED ON JUNE 19, 2017 BY TEMBLOR

    http://temblor.net/earthquake-insights/earthquake-in-greenland-trig...

    This picture shows the settlement of Nuugaatsiaq, which was hit by a tsunami over the weekend. The tsunami was triggered by a landslide following a M=4.1 earthquake. (Photo from: knr.gl)

    Over the weekend, a M=4.1 earthquake on Greenland’s western coast caused a massive landslide, triggering a tsunami that inundated small settlements on the coast. At this stage, four people are feared to have died, nine others were injured, and 11 buildings were destroyed. In the hardest hit village, Nuugaatsiag, which is home to around 100 people, 40 people have been evacuated to Uummannaq, the eleventh-largest town in Greenland (see picture below).

    This Temblor map shows the location of the M=4.1 earthquake on the western coast of Greenland. Despite its small magnitude, the quake caused a landslide, which triggered a tsunami that killed four people.

    While this earthquake appears to be tectonic in nature, according to Professor Meredith Nettles of the Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory at Columbia University, Greenland also experiences what are known as glacial earthquakes. Glacial earthquakes are a relatively new class of seismic event, and are often linked to the calving of large outlet glaciers. While this type of event has also been observed in Antarctica, the majority have been recorded off the coast of Greenland, and show a strong seasonality, with most of them occurring late in the summer.

    Because glacial earthquakes have a different mechanism than normal earthquakes, standard earthquake monitoring techniques cannot be used to detect them, which explains why they were not known about until 2003. Additionally, while a tectonic M=5 quake typically lasts about 2 seconds, a comparable M=5 glacial earthquake can emit long-period (great than 30 seconds) seismic waves. It is because of this, that they have a separate classification.

    In order for a glacial earthquake to occur, a large-scale calving event has to take place. When a glacier calves, there is both a sudden change in glacial mass and motion. While a glacier is technically a river of ice, meaning it slowly flows downhill, when a large calving event take place, there is a brief period when horizontal motion reverses. Couple this with a downward deflection of the glaciers terminus, which causes a upward force on earth’s surface, and you have the recipe for a glacial earthquake. These earthquakes tend to be M=4.6-5.1.

    Despite the fact that this tectonic quake was by no means large, it was big enough to trigger a massive landslide into the ocean, and the ensuing displacement of water was enough to form a tsunami that devastated parts of Nuugaatsiag. Prof. Nettles said to us, “The M=4.1 earthquake does not explain the large, long-period (slow) seismic signal detected by seismometers around the globe. The long-period signal appears to be due to a landslide, and the time of the long-period signal is later than the time of the high-frequency (earthquake) signal. It is possible the earthquake triggered the landslide.” What this means is that both the earthquake and landslide generated seismic signals, but that the earthquake signal appeared first, suggesting the quake triggered the slide. The video below shows a view of the landslide, while the photos show the landslide and the devastation caused by the tsunami. In response to this event, and the risk of aftershocks, people have been advised to stay away from the coastline.

    This picture, taken by the Arctic Command shows part of the landslide that triggered the deadly tsunami.

    This photo shows damage in Nuugaatsiaq, following a deadly tsunami over the weekend. (Photo from: Olina Angie K Nielsen via Facebook)

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    http://www.castlegarnews.com/buzz/incredible-aerial-photos-of-b-c-h...

    Incredible aerial photos of B.C. highway washout that sent man to hospital

    A Williams Lake man is lucky to be alive after being swept down a steep embankment in complete darkness toward the Fraser River while travelling on Highway 20 early Monday morning.

    The motorist and his vehicle were swept some 500 feet down the bank after water washed out a section of the highway in the middle of the night. Early reports indicate the man managed to get himself back up to the highway for help and is currently being treated at hospital.

    The victim’s employer, who does not want to be named, said the man described having the “road just disappear in front of him.”

    “He’s going to be OK and that’s all I want to hear,” the employer said at the hospital Monday, adding the long time Williams Lake resident is very sore but recovering.

    RCMP were called at 3:09 a.m., said RCMP Cpl. Madonna Saunderson, and advised of the washout, estimated to be in excess of 150 metres and approximately a half of a kilometre west of the Sheep Creek Bridge on Highway 20.

    The public is asked to stay away from the area and not to travel Highway 20 at this time.

    Central Cariboo Search and Rescue and BC Ambulance also attended.

    No word yet what caused the slide or where the water came from.

    Chilcotin resident Linda-Lou Howarth said drivers traveling between Williams Lake and the Chilcotin can use the Rudy Johnson Bridge and Meldrum Creek Road as a detour, which will add an extra hour to their trip.

    “People have to be aware of the cattle on the road and the deer,” Howarth said, adding that the road is quite dusty.

  • KM

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4626224/Cliff-fall-sparks-m...

    Dramatic pictures show aftermath of massive cliff fall which saw 50,000 tons of rock plummet into the sea to throw up enormous waves

    • Around 50,000 tons of chalk from the cliff face fell into the sea from around 80m, throwing up a huge wave
    • Coastguard and police teams launched a huge search operation for anyone trapped but this has now ended
    • Emergency services believe it is lucky there was no loss of life - people were seen taking selfies at the edge 

    Incredible photographs from the aftermath of dramatic cliff fall that saw 50,000 tons of rock crash into the sea shows a huge chunk of the coastline missing.

    A huge rescue operation was launched at around 4pm, after the rocks crashed into the waters from a height of around 80 metres, throwing up a huge wave that stunned crowds at Seaford Head, near Eastbourne, East Sussex.

    Emergency services believe it is extremely lucky there was no loss of life after a massive chunk of cliff face chalk plunged into the sea, around six miles from the famous Seven Sisters cliffs. 

    Incredible photographs from the aftermath of dramatic cliff fall at Seaford Head, near Eastbourne, East Sussex

    Incredible photographs from the aftermath of dramatic cliff fall at Seaford Head, near Eastbourne, East Sussex

    The rocks crashed into the waters from a height of around 80 metres, throwing up a huge wave 

    The rocks crashed into the waters from a height of around 80 metres, throwing up a huge wave 

    Large parts of Seaford Head around Splash Point, where the slide occurred, were roped off after cracks appeared.

    Earlier warnings about the loose chalk attracted people looking to take death defying pictures of themselves on the clifftop.

    Another major cliff fall at almost the same point in the cliffs happened during gale force winds over Christmas 2015.

    HM Coastguard spokesman Graham Easton said: 'We would urge people to stay away from the cliff edge. 

    Large parts of Seaford Head around Splash Point, where the slide occurred, were roped off after cracks appeared

    Large parts of Seaford Head around Splash Point, where the slide occurred, were roped off after cracks appeared

    Earlier warnings about the loose chalk attracted people looking to take death defying pictures of themselves on the clifftop

    Earlier warnings about the loose chalk attracted people looking to take death defying pictures of themselves on the clifftop

    'The soft chalk is always a risk.'

    Rescue workers from the Fire Service and Coastguard had to search the area to make sure nobody is trapped under the cliff fall.

    The beach front along the esplanade was packed with tourists and holidaymakers when the white cliffs collapsed.

    Coastguard spokesman Graham Easton said the emergency services launched a make search and rescue operation just after 4pm.

    'Following a large cliff fall we were unsure if there were people trapped.

    'Fire service and a helicopter are involved in the search. 

    'At the moment we are not concerned there are any people missing.' 

    Fire crews scrambled its rope rescue and technical rescue units to the scene.

    The Maritime and Coastguard Agency earlier confirmed that there were no reports of any missing people in the area but a search was undertaken because of the 'sheer scale' of the cliff fall.

    Around three hours later the search was stood down. 

    After the dramatic incident, a spokesman said Newhaven and Birling Gap Coastguard Rescue Teams, the UK Coastguard search and rescue helicopter based at Lydd, was on the scene at the scene.

    Kaimes Beasley, Duty Controller for the UK Coastguard said: 'We will continue to search this area until we are satisfied, along with the other emergency services involved, that no one has been injured or trapped in this fall. 

    'We are advising beach goers to keep away from the scene and we are currently cordoning off the area in the interests of public safety. 

    'I cannot stress enough that this rock fall clearly shows how unstable cliff edges can be, so please keep your distance from cliff edges, at both the top and the bottom of the cliffs, at all times.' 

    An eyewitness told BBC South East : 'I just decided to go in the water and as I've swam out a bit, all I've seen is this huge load of what I thought was smoke.'

    The site of a major cliff fall was a hotspot for people taking dangerous selfies.

  • M. Difato

    More than 140 villagers feared buried in massive Chinese landslide

     https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/2017/06/24/more-than-140-villag...

     More than 140 villagers were feared buried Saturday (June 24) in a massive landslide triggered by heavy rain in Sichuan Province in southwestern China, according to local officials and the Chinese media.

    China Daily reports that five people have been found dead and more than 140 are missing after huge boulders and a mass of earth buried 62 homes in the village of Xinmo in Mao County.

    The Sichuan Daily said rescuers made contact with a villager buried under the rubble who answered her cellphone when they called and burst into tears. The woman was in the bedroom of her home when the landslide hit the village, and rescuers were trying to reach her, the report said.

    The paper said a family of three, including a month-old baby, managed to escape just as the landslide hit their house around 6 a.m.

    Qiao Dashuai told state broadcaster CCTV that the baby saved the family because he was woken up by the child’s crying and was going to change the baby’s diaper when he heard a noise that alerted him to the landslide.

    “We heard a strange noise at the back of our house, and it was rather loud,” Qiao said. “Wind was coming into the room so I wanted to close the door. When we came out, water flow swept us away instantly.” He said they struggled against the flood of water until they met medical workers who took them to a hospital. Qiao said his parents and other relatives had not been found.

    Wang Yongbo, a local rescue official, told CCTV that some 105 million cubic feet of earth and rock — equivalent to more than 1,000 Olympic-sized swimming pools — had slid down the mountain, the Associated Press reports.

    The mass of earth and rocks covered almost a mile of road and blocked over a mile section of a river.

    More than 1,000 firefighters, medical staff and armed police officers were rushed to the scene, but meteorologists said the rescue effort could be hampered by the prospect of three more days of rain.

    Chinese President Xi Jinping on Saturday ordered all-out rescue efforts for anyone trapped in the rubble, the state-owned Xinhua news agency reported.

  • Tracie Crespo

    www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/manipur-heavy-rains-trigger-lands...

    Manipur: Heavy rains trigger landslides along highways, road traffic badly hit

    District officials said that as torrential rains continue to lash Manipur and other northeastern states, there may be more landslides along the highways.

    INDIA Updated: Jul 09, 2017 19:03 IST
    Sobhapati Samom
    Sobhapati Samom 
    Hindustan Times, Imphal
    Manipur
    The Imphal-Jiribam highway in Manipur that broke off between Sinam and Laijan villages on Sunday.(HT Photo)

    Heavy rain continued to cause havoc in Manipur on Sunday, triggering landslides and sinking of highways connecting state capital Imphal with the rest of the country and severely affecting movement of vehicles on the national highways in the state.

    Around 60 feet of the national highway 37 between Sinam and Laijang villages in the Imphal-Jiribam sector, about 35 km from Imphal, broke off on Sunday morning, officials said.

    Heavy landslides also occurred in Lalmati sector of national highway 2 near Kohima, reports said.

    Following the landslide and the breaking off of the highway, nearly 200 goods trucks, mostly laden with rice, were stranded along NH 37.

    Meanwhile, more than 50 Manipur-bound oil tankers went back to Khatkhati in Assam after failing to cross the landslide-hit Lalmati area.

    Authorities have now restricted the movement of vehicles to undertake repair work.

    The JN Institute of Medical Sciences in Imphal inundated by flood waters. (HT Photo)

    Earlier, movement of heavy vehicles in Mao sector of NH 2, about 110 km north of Imphal, was restricted for two days on July 4 and 5 following landslides.

    A landslide at Thanlon in Churachandpur district also affected vehicular movement.

    Some houses were also reportedly damaged following a landslide at Langol Laimanai near Imphal on Sunday morning.

    Manipur has been badly affected by floods, landslides and storms for the last two months after cyclone Mora hit the state in May.

    The Manipur government had even declared the disaster as a state calamity.

    Chief minister N Biren Singh accompanied by parliamentary secretaries on Sunday inspected the flood-affected areas in Imphal East district where more than 14,000 hectares of paddy fields are under water.

    Speaking to the media during the visit, the chief minister said the government was yet to figure out the exact number of houses and villages that have been affected by floods, as many areas have been inundated in the last few days.

    According to official reports, about 40,000 hectares of agricultural land -- about 20% of Manipur’s total agriculture area (1.95 lakh hectare) -- in Imphal West, Thoubal, Bishnupur and Ukhrul have been affected by floods.

  • Starr DiGiacomo

    https://www.inheadline.com/news/41369

    Traffic obstructed as landslide breaks bridge in Sindhupalchok

    Jul 24,2017

    Traffic has been halted after a landslide broke the Larcha bridge over the Bhotekoshi river at Phulpingkatti rural municipality in Sindhupalchok district on Sunday evening.

    Vehicular movement has been obstructed after big boulders that fell along with the landslide debris on the 70 metres long bridge broke it in the middle, the District Police Office, Sindhupalchok stated. The bridge connects Phulpingkatti with Tatopani.

    Huge flood in the river 36 years ago had washed the Nepal-China Friendship bridge at Tatopani and the Larcha bridge. The bridges were constructed some two years after that with the support provided by the Chinese government.

    The locals of Tatopani are facing problem travelling to neighbouring areas and to Bahrabise after the halt in transport services.

  • KM

    http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/residents-been-told-le...

    Residents have been told to leave their homes because their lives are at risk

    Residents were handed letters telling them they must vacate their homes today

    Families have been told to move out of their homes as their lives are at risk due to landslips at the rear of their properties.

    Residents on Cyfyng Road in Ystalyfera in the upper Swansea Valley were handed letters from Neath Port Talbot Council effectively telling them they must vacate their homes by Thursday, August 10.

    The letter states: “Following our monitoring and investigation relating to the landslips at the rear of your property, we are of the opinion that there continues to be a risk to life and property, with the houses in 81-96 Cyfyng Road containing hazards relating to structural collapse, and the sewerage system serving some of the houses is inadequate.”

    A council spokesman said it is "the council's intention to secure alternative accommodation for the residents affected".

    He said the decision to tell residents to leave their homes had "not been taken lightly" but it was "a matter of public safety".

    It comes six months after a landslide hit the street , which saw trees and bushes tear down the hillside into the Swansea canal.

    And while it is understood that some families have already left, others have not been so quick to pack their bags.

    One resident, Paul Harris, said: “We have all been told that we have to move out immediately but I have two dogs so I can’t move anywhere. They were talking about offering me a B&B in Swansea but the dogs will have to go into kennels but I won’t do that.”


    Cyfyng Road resident, Paul Harris in what is left of his back garden.

    Mr Harris has questioned the level of danger.

    He said: “If there is an immediate risk to life, why haven’t they closed the road? There are children walking down here with their mothers and prams. If this house goes it could just crash down and kill someone. Is there really that level of risk?”

    Another resident, David Morris, said: “I grew up here around landslides so I don’t think it’s as dangerous as they are making out.

    John Emery, who said he has yet to receive a letter, complained over a lack of information.

    He said: “We have ended up with people frightened out of their minds and you can’t get any blasted answers from the council.

    “It makes me feel very, very worried. We were told several months ago that it was perfectly safe, there was no fall away but now we are being told we have to go.

    “It’s a miserable situation. We have been completely left in the dark. I think we have been treated disgustingly.”


    Cyfyng Road resident, John Emery.

    A spokesman for Neath Port Talbot Council said: "The decision to ask people to leave their homes at such short notice has not been taken lightly, but this is a matter of public safety.


    “Following monitoring and investigation of the landslips at the rear of 81 to 96 Cyfyng Road, we are of the opinion that there is a high risk of further collapse and consequently a risk to the occupiers if they remain in these properties.


    “Based on recent inspection findings and expert advice, we are now satisfied that Category 1 hazards exist at the properties which pose an imminent risk to the health and safety of occupiers and visitors and, as such, immediate emergency action had to be taken."

    He added that help had been given.

    He said: "“Council officers from relevant services have been in Ystalyfera to offer advice and support to the residents who are affected.


    "The assistance is ongoing and it is the council's intention to secure alternative accommodation for the residents affected."

  • Yvonne Lawson

    At least 200 are killed after being trapped under rubble in huge Sierra Leone mudslide

    At least 200 have been killed after a mudslide sparked by heavy rain crashed through part of Sierra Leone's capital.

    Homes were swept away in Regent, in the outskirts of Freetown, while roads turned into rampaging rivers as the mudslide struck.

    Relatives dug through the mud in search of their loved ones and a morgue overflowed with bodies after heavy rains and flooding.

    Shocking pictures on social media have emerged online showing bodies piled up in the mud. 

    Vice President Victor Foh said: 'It is likely that hundreds are lying dead underneath the rubble.

    'The disaster is so serious that I myself feel broken,' he added. 'We're trying to cordon (off) the area (and) evacuate the people.'

    People cried as they looked at the damage under steady rain, gesturing toward a muddy hillside where dozens of houses used to stand, a Reuters witness said.



    Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4789142/Hundreds-likely-dea... 



  • Starr DiGiacomo

    https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/95968810/cliff-collapse-swallows-b...

    Cliff collapse swallows backyard in Bucklands Beach, east Auckland video