"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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Comment by sourabh kale on May 6, 2014 at 8:42pm

Five houses in a Prince George’s County neighborhood have been deemed unsafe and 23 others have had to be evacuated after a chunk of earth dislodged beneath the properties over the weekend and slid downward, triggering a water main break and destabilizing the road to the homes.

And for residents it is not clear when they’ll be able to return.

Prince George’s County government officials said the road collapse occurred on Piscataway Drive in Fort Washington. Geo-technical engineers called it a “slope failure,” a sort of lower-grade landslide.

The strip of land that is collapsing is about 1,500 feet long, said Darrell Mobley, director of the county’s Department of Public Works and Transportation. Trees up to 200 feet tall are falling, taking power lines with them.

Now officials are rushing to assess the situation and devise a plan for restoring the area’s structural integrity.

“It will take at least two weeks timeframe for them to determine an appropriate short term solution to the problem,” Mobley said. “It’s too early to determine” when residents can return.

A dramatic crack has split the middle of a street in the neighborhood, made up of large, single-family, custom-made houses.

Officials said they saw Piscataway Drive, a dead-end street that cascades downhill to the Potomac River tributary Piscataway Creek, start to crack over the weekend. County and Washington Suburban Sanitary Commission workers went to the area three times to repair the break but eventually told residents Sunday the situation had deteriorated, said Aubrey Thagard, assistant deputy chief administrative officer for the county’s office of economic development and public infrastructure.

Prince George’s officials are hoping to have more information on Tuesday about the sloping, but they said they think the significant rainfall last week may have caused the soil to shift.

But some frustrated residents said the sloping land is not a new problem.

“We have had smaller mudslides for the last 10 years,” said homeowner Dawn Taylor. “The county has come and patched-job the cracks in our slopes but they have not fixed it.”

Resident Sue Howland arrived on the scene and burst into tears. Her husband is an amputee who can’t get around on his own, and she takes care of 20 cats.

“This is our dream house and I didn’t know if we’re facing never seeing it again,” said Howland, who, overcome with emotion, fell into a county employee’s arms.

Officials were working to help her husband out of the home and find shelter for the couple as well as their pets.

An information center has been set up at Harmony Hall Regional Center on Livingston Road. County officials will work with the American Red Cross to shelter displaced homeowners, though many said they would be staying with friends or family. Family services also will be providing meals at Harmony Hall to those forced to evacuate.

At least one resident didn’t understand why county officials were forcing people out.

“I don’t want to leave, the county is being unreasonable,” said John Schnizlein, waving his orange mandatory evacuation notice that had been taped onto his front door.

Schnizlein, a 19-year resident of the neighborhood, said the water main has broken several times before and he, along with several neighbors, is determined to stay.

“Our goal is to get you back as soon as we can, safely,” Gary Cunningham, of the county’s Department of Permitting, Inspections and Enforcement, told Schnizlein.

But Schnizlein was determined to stay. He said if he needed water for the bathroom he would get it from the nearby creek.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/28-prince-georges-county-homes-...

Comment by Howard on May 3, 2014 at 8:58pm

Update on the recent landslide in Afghanistan:

Up to 2,700 Dead, 14,000 Affected by Historic Landslide in Badakhshan

more photos...

Afghan officials gave up hope on Saturday of finding any survivors from a landslide in the remote northeast, with the number killed or missing as much as 2,700 in mud up to 100 meters deep.

The United Nations said the focus now was on helping more than 4,000 displaced people.

International organizations and Afghan officials said at least 300 mud brick homes were buried on Friday, but precise information on the number killed was hard to come by in the impoverished province bordering Tajikistan.

Afghans search for survivors after a massive landslide landslide buried a village Friday, in Badakhshan province, northeastern Afghanistan, which Afghan and UN officials say left hundreds of dead and missing missing. (Ahmad Zubair/The Associated Press)

The U.N. mission in Afghanistan said more than 350 people were killed, but a spokesman for the local governor put the number in excess of 2,100. The Geneva-based International Organization for Migration (IOM) said 2,700 were dead or missing.

"The scale of this landslide is absolutely devastating, with an entire village practically wiped away," IOM Afghanistan Chief of Mission Richard Danziger said. "Hundreds of families have lost everything and are in immense need of assistance."

The United Nations said the focus was now on the more than 4,000 people displaced, either directly as a result of the landslide or as a precautionary measure from villages assessed to be at risk. The IOM said over 14,000 people were affected.

Their main needs are water, medicine, food and emergency shelter, said Ari Gaitanis, a spokesman from the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan.

Officials expressed concern the unstable hillside above the site of the disaster may cave in again, threatening the homeless as well as the U.N. and local rescue teams working there.

Villagers and a few dozen police, equipped with only basic digging tools, resumed their search when daylight broke but it soon became clear there was no hope of finding survivors buried in the deep mud and rubble.

"Seven members of my family were here, four or five of them were killed ... I am also half alive, what can I do?" said an elderly woman, her hair covered in a pink shawl.

Dotted with villages of mud-brick homes nestled in valleys beside bare slopes, Badakhshan province has been hit by several deadly landslides in recent years.

Plea for help

The side of the mountain above Abi-Barak collapsed at around 11 a.m. local time on Friday as people were trying to recover belongings and livestock after a smaller landslip hit a few hours earlier.Hundreds of homes were destroyed in the landslides that were triggered by torrential rain. Officials worry another section of the mountainside could collapse at any time.

The Afghan military flew rescue teams to the area on Saturday, as the remote mountain region is served by only narrow, poor roads which have themselves been damaged by more than a week of heavy rain.

"We have managed to get one excavator into the area, but digging looks hopeless," Colonel Abdul Qadeer Sayad, a deputy police chief of Badakhshan, told Reuters.

He said the sheer size of the area affected, and the depth of the mud, meant that only modern machinery could help.

NATO-led coalition troops are on standby to assist but on Saturday said the Afghan government had not asked for help.

"I call on the government to come and help our people, to take the bodies out," said a middle-aged man, standing on a hill overlooking the river of mud where his village once stood.

"We managed to take out only 10 to 15 people, the rest of our villagers here are trapped."

Freezing conditions

Hundreds of people camped out overnight in near freezing conditions, although some were given tents. Officials distributed food and water.

U.S. President Barack Obama said American forces were on standby to help. About 30,000 U.S. soldiers remain in Afghanistan, although that number is falling as Washington prepares to withdraw all combat troops who battled Taliban insurgents by the end of this year.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on May 3, 2014 at 3:40am

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/landslide-near-ender...

Landslide near Enderby, B.C., strands 200 residents

Emergency officials flying in drinking water and personnel, road won't be opened until Monday

The Shuswap River is clogged with logs and debris, east of Enderby, B.C., after a landslide washed out a bridge spanning Cooke Creek, isolating a number of residents.

The Shuswap River is clogged with logs and debris, east of Enderby, B.C., after a landslide washed out a bridge spanning Cooke Creek, isolating a number of residents.

A landslide has sent mud and vegetation down Cooke Creek into the Shuswap River, 25 kilometres east of Enderby in B.C.'s North Okanagan, leaving about 200 residents stranded.

The slide washed out Mabel Lake Road and a bridge spanning the creek, isolating residents on the other side.  B.C. Hydro reports nearly 700 people are without power but the utility can't get into the area until the road is opened.

Crews with the Ministry of Transportation are working to clear the road, but it's estimated the road will be closed until Monday.

Vernon, B.C., Search and Rescue has been called to the scene.

Emergency officials say no one was injured in the slide but they are keeping watch as a large amount of logs and debris flows toward Enderby.

Dairy farmer Michael Haak lives five kilometres from the slide site and says he's never seen the waterway so clogged with debris and logs.

"It was moving pretty good. It was getting hung up a little bit on the irrigation intakes, and it kinda ripped them out," he said.

The town of Enderby has activated the regional emergency operations centre.

"We are taking every step we can to be well prepared in case there is any threat to infrastructure," said Tate Bengtson, Enderby's chief administrative officer.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on May 2, 2014 at 8:33pm

http://bigstory.ap.org/article/afghan-official-says-250-missing-aft...

2,000 MISSING AFTER LANDSLIDE IN AFGHANISTAN KILLS AT LEAST 350, BURIES VILLAGE

 May. 2, 2014 2:00 PM EDT
https://twitter.com/bsarwary/status/462295290880729088/photo/1

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — A landslide buried about a third of a remote northeastern Afghan village on Friday, killing at least 350 people and leaving more than 2,000 missing. Villagers looked on helplessly and the governor appealed for shovels and other equipment to help dig through the mass of mud that flattened the homes in its path.

The mountainous area in Badakhshan province has experienced frequent floods in recent days, and the side of the hill collapsed onto the village of Hobo Barik at about 1 p.m. Landslides and avalanches are frequent in Afghanistan, but Friday's was one of the deadliest.

Gov. Shah Waliullah Adeeb said more than 2,000 people were missing after a hill collapsed on the village of after days of heavy rain. Adeeb said the landslide buried some 300 homes in the area — about a third of all houses there.

Ari Gaitanis, a spokesman from the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, said at least 350 people died in the landslide. He said the U.N. was working with authorities on the ground to rescue people still trapped.

The governor said rescue crews were working but didn't have enough equipment.

"It's physically impossible right now," Adeeb said. "We don't have enough shovels; we need more machinery."

Video footage of the scene showed how a large section of the mountain had simply slipped away sending mud and earth sliding through the village below.

The landslide was likely due to heavy rain in the area, said Abdullah Homayun Dehqan, the province's director for National Disaster Department. He said floods last week in different districts of the province killed four people and eight more were still missing.

The province normally has many landslides, but they generally occur in remote areas and produce no casualties, said Mohammad Usman Abu Zar from the Meteorology Department of Badakhshan province. He said authorities would investigate further, but initial reports indicated that the heavy rain was the cause.

Authorities evacuated a nearby village over concerns about further landslides, the governor said.

Provincial police chief Faziluddin Hayar said the landslide happened about 1 p.m. Friday. Friday is a day of worship in Afghanistan, so many families would have been at home instead of at work at the time.

Badakhshan province, nestled in the Hindu Kush and Pamir mountain ranges and bordering China, is one of the most remote in the country. The area has seen few attacks from insurgents following the 2001 U.S.-led invasion of Afghanistan.

Afghans living in the rugged mountains of northern Afghanistan are used to avalanches as well. The most deadly one in the past two years occurred in February 2010, when more than 170 people were killed at the 12,700-foot (3,800-meter) -high Salang Pass, which is the major route through the Hindu Kush mountains that connects the capital to the north.

Comment by Howard on May 2, 2014 at 5:12am

Video of the recent Baltimore landslide. Dramatic movement begins at around 1:15 min.

Source

http://www.mediaite.com/online/watch-incredible-video-shows-baltimo...

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on May 1, 2014 at 8:34pm

http://www.wdam.com/story/25401086/heavy-rain-triggers-mudslide-in-ny

Heavy rain triggers mudslide in NY

Posted: May 01, 2014 9:07 AM EDTUpdated: May 01, 2014 9:22 AM EDT

YONKERS, NY (WCBS/CNN) - A retention wall partially collapsed in Yonkers, NY Wednesday night, causing a 40-foot-wide landslide.

The landslide covered a section of commuter train tracks with concrete, rock and dirt.

No one was hurt, but train commuters should expect delays of up to a half hour Thursday morning.

It's believed heavy rains caused the incident.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on May 1, 2014 at 8:30pm

http://longisland.news12.com/news/heavy-rain-causes-landslide-in-se...

Heavy rain causes landslide in Sea Cliff - Long Island NY

Much of the driveway and backyard of the house came tumbling down with the bluff into the Long Island Sound. (1:23 PM)

SEA CLIFF - The heavy rain caused a landslide in Sea Cliff, sending one homeowner's backyard into the Long Island Sound. 

The home on Bay Avenue and 16th Avenue was evacuated, but there were no injuries reported. 

Much of the driveway and backyard of the house came tumbling down with the bluff into the Sound at around 7 a.m.. 

The homeowner had recently spent $150,000 to build a new retaining wall. 

Sea Cliff Mayor Bruce Kennedy says that officials are checking other houses to make sure that nobody else on the hillside is at risk.

Comment by Starr DiGiacomo on May 1, 2014 at 8:26pm

http://www.thenewage.co.za/124442-1020-53-At_least_4_dead_in_Mexico...

May 1 2014 7:20PM
 

At least four people, including two children, died when torrential rains sparked a landslide in central Mexico in the pre-dawn hours Thursday, local authorities said.

"We send our condolences to the families of the four people who lost their lives in Huehuetlan El Grande," wrote Puebla state governor Rafael Moreno on Twitter.
 
The two adult victims were women, Moreno said, adding that more people are still missing including three children. The landslide also engulfed a half dozen vehicles.
 
According to the Civil Defense personnel, the storm that hit Wednesday night caused flooding that reached over a meter (three feet) high in some canyons.
 
The landslide in this town some 165 kilometers (102 miles) from the Mexican capital, occurred in a hard-to-access area known as "Barranca San Baltazar," which was hit by heavy rains.
 
Emergency responders have arrived on the scene to search for the missing.
Comment by Tracie Crespo on April 27, 2014 at 3:28am

Landslide blocks Nepali tunnel, 16 trapped

http://www.worldbulletin.net/asia-pasific/134716/landslide-blocks-n...

Landslide blocks Nepali tunnel, 16 trapped
File Photo

A few Chinese technicians were working with about 12 Nepali workers inside the tunnel of the Upper Madi Hydroelectric Project when falling earth and rocks blocked its entrance.

World Bulletin/News Desk

Sixteen workers including a Chinese national have been trapped by a landslide inside the tunnel of a hydroelectric power project in Nepal, a project official said on Friday.

The men were working at the Upper Madi Hydroelectric Project in Kaski district, 125 km (80 miles) west of Kathmandu, when falling earth and rocks blocked the tunnel entrance.

"Excavators are removing the debris and we are trying to rescue those trapped inside," said Ram Raj Koirala, a Nepali official at the power station being built by a Chinese firm.

He said rescuers had established contact with 13 of the 16 people trapped in the tunnel and they were safe. There was no information about the others.

Drinking water and air have been supplied to the men through pipes and they are expected to be out in three to four hours, Koirala told Reuters from the site.

The project would generate 25 megawatts of power in the energy-starved country. The China International Water and Electric Corporation owns 80 percent of the $650 million plant while the project's Nepali backers own the rest.

Nepal has the potential to generate up to 83,000 megawatts of hydro-power from rivers cascading down from the Himalayas, the world's highest mountain range.

But due to a lack of funds and technical know-how, just 1 percent of that potential has been tapped. Nepal's 27 million people typically endure 12 hours of power cuts a day.

China is a major donor, business partner and investor in Nepal, a strategically located buffer state between China and India. Many Chinese companies are involved in infrastructure projects that include hydroelectric power.

Comment by Howard on April 25, 2014 at 4:44pm

Map of landslides in the U.S. since 2007.

(Click on the link below for an interactive map.)

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2014/04/140422-surveying-am...

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