Breaking
news: a very large landslide in Alaska on Sunday
Detecting
very large landslides with seismic data
The
Mount Lituya landslide on 2012. Sunday’s landslide is likely to be
even larger! Source:
http://www.nationalparkstraveler.com/2012/07/massive-landslide-coats-glacier-bay-national-parks-johns-hopkins-glacier-chocolate-frosting10200#comment-41027
20
February, 2014
Regular
readers will know that Colin
Stark and Goran Ekstrom have developed a technique to use the global
seismic network to detect very large landslides
– this is published in Ekstrom and Stark (2012) and was accompanied
by a commentary that I wrote (Petley 2012). In 2012 they
detected the Mount Lituya rock avalanche in Alaska (shown in the
image below), and I was extremely fortunate to be able to feature it
on this blog before anyone
in Alaska was aware of it.
They also used this technique to identify the Seti
River landslide in Nepal,
and various other landslides as well.
A
new, very large landslide in Alaska
Using
this technique, Colin and Goran, together with Clement Hibert, have
detected a new, very large landslide in the Alaska panhandle.
Clearly this post is with their kind agreement and using information
that they have supplied. The landslide occurred on 16th
February 2014 (i.e. on Sunday) at 14:24 UT (i.e. at 05:24 local
time). Using the LFH techniques in Ekstrom and Stark (2013),
the approximate parameters of the landslide can be deduced.
This suggests that the landslide had the following characteristics:
Maximum
force Fmax (from single force inversion): ~ 1.25 10^11 N
Direction:
~ to the ENE
Using
the rough scaling “law” in Ekström & Stark (2013) for mass
from max force, mass ~6.8*10^10kg = 68 million tonnes.
These
parameters should be considered to be preliminary at this stage, but
if confirmed using satellite imagery this will be the largest natural
landslide since 2010, and the largest landslide anywhere in the world
since the Bingham
Canyon mine event.
For
reference, the Lituya Mountain landslide (which so dramatic that it
was even featured in the Daily
Mail!)
had a mass of about 20 million tonnes. The seismic data
suggests that this landslide may also have run out over ice, so it is
likely to be a truly impressive event once it is located.
References
Ekstrom,
G., & Stark, C. (2013). Simple Scaling of Catastrophic Landslide
Dynamics. Science,
339
(6126), 1416-1419 DOI: 10.1126/science.1232887
Petley,
D. (2013). Characterizing Giant Landslides. Science,
339
(6126), 1395-1396 DOI: 10.1126/science.1236165
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.