What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

25
What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches? What is a grainflow? A density underflow? What is dispersive presssure? How are avalanches controlled? What is permafrost? What factors result in melting of permafrost? What sorts of surface phenomena are associated with areas of permafrost?

description

What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches? What is a grainflow? A density underflow? What is dispersive presssure? How are avalanches controlled? What is permafrost? What factors result in melting of permafrost? What sorts of surface phenomena are associated with areas - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Page 1: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

 What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?What is a grainflow? A density underflow?What is dispersive presssure?How are avalanches controlled?

What is permafrost? What factors result in melting of permafrost?

What sorts of surface phenomena are associated with areasof permafrost?

Page 2: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 3: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Solifluction lobe

Page 4: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Creep is the very slow downslope motion of the surface soillayers. Wetting and drying, and freeze-thaw cause enoughdisturbance to allow grains to move down the slope.

Page 5: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Downslope creepin layered beds ofsedimentary rocks.

Fractures in rock allow slip of smallerblocks, but giveappearance of bending of the beds.

Page 6: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Global warmingwill reduce the extent of permafrost.

Consequences:

Disruption of ecosystems,roads, foundations, etc.

Release of methane hydratesresulting in enhanced greenhouse effects

Page 7: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 8: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Mars

Earth

Page 10: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Rock glacier in central Alaska Range. Rock glaciers are madeof rock with a matrix of ice. They flow slowly downslope, liketrue glaciers, but move only during the freeze-thaw periods offall and spring.

Page 11: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Solifluction lobes - Alaska. Freeze-thaw of shallow surfacematerials on a permafrost substrate. Note ‘patterned’ ground.

Page 12: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

A cryoturbate soil

Page 13: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

http://www.avalanche.org/picturepage.htm

Page 14: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 15: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 16: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Avalanches are initiated by thedownslope movement of a massor slab of snow, as diagrammedabove. Oversteepening of cornicesand collapse is a common triggeringmechanism.

As snow moves downslopeair is entrained into the snow, and the grains ofsnow - ice crystals - becomeseparated. As more air isentrained, the avalanche acts like a low-viscosityfluid - a grain flow.

Page 17: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

http://www.avalanche.org/~uac/obphotos/observer.html

Page 18: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 19: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Slide on the Seward Highway, AK about to hit tidewater. Photo by Terry Onslow

Page 20: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Slab avalanche sequence on Mount Superior, Utah, triggered by helicopter bombing. Photos by Dan Judd

http://www.avalanche.org/picturepage.htm

Avalanche on the Milford Road, New Zealand, Photo by Peter Weir

Page 21: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Identification of avalanche source areas (left) and run-out tracks(right) are key to avalanche control and protection.

Page 22: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Crown fracture of a large dry slab avalanche in the Cariboo Mountains. Research staff perform stability tests done near small and large avalanches such as this one.

 The shear frame test. The shear frame is used to test the shear strength of weak snowpack layers.

 The shear frame test. The shear frame is used to test the shear strength of weak snowpack layers.

The shear frame test. The shear frame is used to

test the shear strength of weak snowpack layers.

 Once buried, surface hoar (frost) forms a weak layer that can sometimes remain weak enough to release slab avalanches weeks after the

layer was buried.

Page 23: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 24: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?
Page 25: What characteristics distinguish mudflows from avalanches?

Avalanches arecommon occurrencesin mountainous regions. Destructionof property andloss of life may result.

Ski areas are particularly prone toavalanches - thecombination of steepslopes and abundantsnowfall.