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         Landslides:     more books (100)
  1. Landslides and Engineering Practice
  2. Looks like a landslide, (A Fawcett special, no. 6) by Gerald C Gardner, 1964
  3. Floods and Landslides: Integrated Risk Assessment (Environmental Science and Engineering / Environmental Science)
  4. Landslides & Avalanches (Natural Disasters Series) by Terry Jennings, 1999-10
  5. Landslides and Related Phenomena A Study Of Mass-Movements of Soil and Rock by Sharpe C.F. Stewart, 1960
  6. Rockfall Prediction and Control and Landslide Case Histories (Transportation Research Record)
  7. Applying a GIS slope-stability model to site-specific landslide prevention in Honduras. (Research).(geographic information system): An article from: Journal of Soil and Water Conservation by B.F. Zaitchik, H.M. van Es, 2003-01-01
  8. The landslide on the Bouquet River near Willsboro, N.Y (Circular - New York State Museum) by D. H Newland, 1938
  9. Problems remain despite election landslide. (1994 Congressional and state elections) (Editorial): An article from: National Underwriter Property & Casualty-Risk & Benefits Management
  10. Catastrophic Landslides: Effects, Occurrence, and Mechanisms (Reviews in Engineering Geology)
  11. Trapped in the Landslide by Geoff Stevens, 2007-05-21
  12. A Rock in a Landslide by Rance S. Gregory, 2005-04-05
  13. Explaining Labour's Landslide by Robert M. Worcester, Roger Mortimore, 1999-07-27
  14. Assessment of Proposed Partnerships to Implement a National Landslide Hazards Mitigation Strategy: Interim Report by Committee on the Review of National Landslide Hazards Mitigation Strategy, National Research Council, 2002-07-12

121. Nearctica - Geophysics - Avalanches And Landslides
Should you be under the mistaken impression that most landslides take place in Italian landslides. Photographs of landslides and mudslides in Italy with
http://www.nearctica.com/geology/avalan.htm
Avalanches and Landslides Special Segments Butterflies of North America Conifers of North America Eastern Birds List of N.A. Insects Home Eastern Wildflowers General Topics Natural History Ecology Family Environment Evolution Home Education Home Conservation Geophysics Paleontology Commercial Organizations Return to Geophysics Main Page AVALANCHES Cyberspace Snow and Avalanche Center . Jim Frankenfield. This site is a good place to start if you are interested in avalanches. You'll find articles on avalanches and avalanche safety. Current conditions are also featured along with an index to photographs of avalanches on the web. There is a little of everything here. Recommended. Avalanche Information . Rocky Mountain Hiking. An introduction to avalanches, stability evaluation, and avalanche safety. Recommended. Avalanche . Nova Online. This web site is primarily a history of the making of a show for NOVA on PBS. It also has, however, segments on avalanches in general and a primer on avalanche safety. Westwide Avalanche Network . A miscellaneous collection of information and links related to avalanches and avalance safety. Swiss Federation Snow and Avalanche Research Davos . This site is a great resource for the physics of avalanches and avalance safety. Colorado Avalanche Information Center . Basic avalanche information, current avalanche conditions in Colorado, and some very nice avalanche photographs.

122. CNN.com - Ecuadorean Rains Leave More Than 40 Dead - June 13, 2001
CNN
http://cnn.com/2001/WORLD/americas/06/13/ecuador.landslides/index.html
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Ecuadorean rains leave more than 40 dead
QUITO, Ecuador (CNN) Thirty-six people died in a landslide Tuesday, buried under mud and rocks that tumbled from a mountain onto a highway in the province of Napo, the Ecuadorean Red Cross said. The accident brings the number of people killed in the country to 41 as a result of heavy rains, which began last Friday. Tuesday's victims were waiting for the reopening of the road that leads to Baeza, 30 miles east of the capital. It was shut down Monday as a result of several landslides. None of those caused any injuries. Elsie Andrade, a National Civil Defense spokeswoman, said the victims "had set up an improvised camping ground, where they were waiting for the highway to be reopened when the mountain fell on top of them." Communication with the remote area, where cell phones and radio transmissions do not work, was difficult. Red Cross workers, fire officials and police were searching for any possible survivors, trying to recover the victims' bodies, and said more dead could be buried under the mountains of mud which covered the narrow highway, a rural road that leads to the Amazon.

123. Landslides
landslides may be triggered by other geologic hazards such as earthquakes landslides are costly. One nightmare for Idaho is maintaining highway US 95,
http://www.idahogeology.org/Services/GeologicHazards/Landslides/default.htm
Programs and Services
Geologic Hazards Landslides
"Landslide" is the general term for the slow or rapid movement of a soil and rock mass down a slope, or for the mass itself. It covers a variety of processes and landforms known as rockslide, rockfall, debris flow, liquefaction, slump, earthflow, and mudflow. The Idaho Geological Survey has identified and plotted over 3,000 landslides in the state for the U.S. Geological Survey's national landslide appraisal. Landslides are a recurrent menace to waterways and highways and a threat to homes, schools, businesses, and other facilities. Landslides may be triggered by other geologic hazards such as earthquakes and floods. Factors of weather and climate, like melting snow and rain that increase the water content of earth materials, may fuel slope instability. The activities of urban and rural living with excavations, roads, drainage ways, landscape watering, logging, and agricultural irrigation may also disturb the solidity of landforms. Late spring-early summer is slide season, particularly after days and weeks of greater than normal precipitation. Landslides are costly. One nightmare for Idaho is maintaining highway U.S. 95, the primary and, in most places, only north-south link from the Canadian border. Redirecting local and through traffic around a landslide is not an option in many places on this heavily traveled road. Alternate routes do not exist, and detours in steep terrain are difficult or impossible to construct. The unimpeded movement over roads

124. Canada Landslide Project
Details of a major national landslide project in Canada, providing reports, links and photographs of major slides.
http://sts.gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/landslides/index_e.asp
Contact us Help Search Canada Site ... Home Tools for professionals Data Model Natural Resources Canada Earth Sciences Sector Strong and safe communities Natural hazards and emergency response > Canada Landslide Project
Landslides
Protecting the safety of Canadians, their communities and infrastructure
Landslides in the News Interactive Landslide Information GSC Landslide Researchers About Landslides Landslide Research outside the GSC Canadian Landslide Databases Date Modified : 2003-12-4 Important Notices

125. SCOTTISH ROAD NETWORK LANDSLIDES STUDY
This report explains what landslides are, how they can be assessed in terms of the hazards they create and the exposure to road users, identifies areas of
http://www.scotland.gov.uk/Publications/2005/07/08131738

126. CNN.com - Rain Triggers Mountain Collapse In Northern India - August 11, 2000
CNN
http://www.cnn.com/2000/ASIANOW/south/08/11/india.landslides.ap/index.html
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Rain triggers mountain collapse in northern India
August 12, 2000

127. How Do Landslides, Volcanic Eruptions, And Cosmic Collisions Generate Tsunamis?
Submarine landslides, which often accompany large earthquakes, Conversely, supermarine landslides and cosmicbody impacts disturb the water from above,
http://www.geophys.washington.edu/tsunami/general/physics/other.html
How do landslides, volcanic eruptions, and cosmic collisions generate tsunamis?
A tsunami can be generated by any disturbance that displaces a large water mass from its equilibrium position. In the case of earthquake-generated tsunamis, the water column is disturbed by the uplift or subsidence of the sea floor. Submarine landslides, which often accompany large earthquakes, as well as collapses of volcanic edifices, can also disturb the overlying water column as sediment and rock slump downslope and are redistributed across the sea floor. Similarly, a violent submarine volcanic eruption can create an impulsive force that uplifts the water column and generates a tsunami. Conversely, supermarine landslides and cosmic-body impacts disturb the water from above, as momentum from falling debris is transferred to the water into which the debris falls. Generally speaking, tsunamis generated from these mechanisms, unlike the Pacific-wide tsunamis caused by some earthquakes, dissipate quickly and rarely affect coastlines distant from the source area. This image shows Lituya Bay, Alaska, after a huge, landslide-generated tsunami occurred on July 9, 1958. The earthquake-induced rockslide, shown in upper right-hand corner of this image, generated a 525 m splash-up immediately across the bay, and razed trees along the bay and across LaChausse Spit before leaving the bay and dissipating in the open waters of the Gulf of Alaska. Source:

128. Landslides - Internet Sites - Natural Hazards Center
Links to resources from the University of Colorado.
http://www.colorado.edu/hazards/resources/landslides.html
Back to Internet Sites Index
Landslides
http://landslides.usgs.gov/
http://landslides.usgs.gov/html_files/nlicsun.html

http://landslides.usgs.gov/html_files/landslides/nationalmap/national.html

http://www.usgs.gov/themes/landslid.html
...
http://ilrg.gndci.pg.cnr.it/

The International Landslide Research Group (ILRG) is an informal group of individuals concerned about mass earth movement and interested in sharing information on landslide research. The ILRG Web site currently provides all back issues of the group's newsletter, with information about landslide programs, new initiatives, meetings and publications, the experiences of people engaged in landslide research, and "any other information about landslide research that 'normal' journals will not accept." http://www.planning.org/landslides/docs/main.html
The American Planning Association's (APA's) research department has embarked on a program to bring together information about and solutions to landslide hazard risks from multiple disciplines into a single source to aid local planning. Proposed products include:
  • A guidebook for local planners that will bring together the science, the practice, and alternatives for planning and zoning for landslide hazards;

129. Landslides - King County Emergency Services
Photo Landslide landslides can be a dangerous secondary hazard when initiated by Although landslides can and do occur in almost any part of the state,
http://www.metrokc.gov/prepare/preparerespond/hazardsdisasters/landslides.aspx
Emergency Services Office of Emergency Management
Search this section only Contact Us Print You're in Emergency Services Landslides King County Office of Emergency Management
Renton, Washington
MAIN: 206-296-3830
Toll Free: 1-800-523-5044 TTY: 206-205-7516
Fax: 206-205-4056
Landslides
Photo provided by King County Executive's Office Landslides can be a dangerous secondary hazard when initiated by severe storms . The power of these land movements was exemplified in the severe winter storm that hit the Puget Sound region in December 1996 and January 1997. During this storm, heavy snowfall was followed by a warming trend that caused quick melting, runoff and flooding, followed by a period of rain. This led to over 100 slides in King County over the subsequent two-month period. Severe storms are not the only cause of landslides. The

130. Woodway Landslide Monitoring
Raw data files and aerial view of area.
http://landslides.usgs.gov/woodway/

Geologic Hazards
Landslides People and Projects > Woodway landslide monitoring
Landslide monitoring, Woodway, Washington
Project Information
Site Location:
View site layout Aerial View of site
View Data: Summary Data
Ground-water pressure head

Response of ground-water pressure head to the Feb 28, 2001 earthquake

Rainfall
... project information
This page created/modified: 9 December 1997 / 19 August 2003
Maintained by: Webmaster
The URL of this page is: http://landslides.usgs.gov/woodway/index.html

131. CVO Menu - Debris Avalanches And Volcanic Landslides
Debris Avalanches Volcanic landslides. Background and Information. DESCRIPTION Debris Avalanches and Volcanic landslides includes Debris Avalanches and
http://vulcan.wr.usgs.gov/Glossary/DebrisAval/framework.html

USGS/Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, Washington
Debris Avalanches
Volcanic Landslides

132. Landslides In Nebraska
Part III Examples of the Five Types of landslides Found in Nebraska. Part IV For more information about landslides in Nebraska
http://csd.unl.edu/surveyareas/landslides.asp
Conservation and Survey Division
Landslides in Nebraska, A Brief Introduction
Compiled by
Duane A. Eversoll, CSD Research Geologist Introduction Landslides in Nebraska Database Table of Contents
  • Part I: The Birth and Development of a Landslide Located Five Miles West of Lincoln on Interstate 80 (a five photograph series) Part II: Five Types of Landslides Identified Along Nebraska Roadways
  • Rock Falls Earth Slumps ... Part IV: For more information about landslides in Nebraska
  • Part I: The Birth and Development of a Landslide Located Five Miles West of Lincoln on Interstate 80
    (a five photograph series)
    March 4, 1987
    Photo 1 of 5
    March 19, 1987
    Photo 2 of 5
    April 17, 1987
    Photo 3 of 5
    March 20, 1990
    Photo 4 of 5 July 8, 1993 Photo 5 of 5 Part II: Five Types of Landslides Identified Along Nebraska Roadways Geologic materials and the type of movement involved were used to identify types of landslides in Nebraska. A landslide is defined in general terms as the downward and outward movement of earth materials. The five types of landslides identifiedusing the

    133. AZGS Slope Failure Information
    Hazard Fact Sheet landslides - US Geological Survey TIPS FOR INCREASING YOUR AWARENESS OF landslides - International Landslide Research Group
    http://www.azgs.state.az.us/slopefailure_links.htm
    Mass Movement (slope failure) Information Links
    Landslides, Debris Flows, Rockfalls
    Landslide Incidence and Susceptibility of the Southwestern United States - US Geological Survey Fact Sheet - Landslides and Mudflows - FEMA Backgrounder - Landslides - FEMA Geologic Hazards - Landslides - US Geological Survey National Landslide Information Center - US Geological Survey Hazard Fact Sheet - Landslides - US Geological Survey Map Showing Inventory and Regional Susceptibility for Holocene Debris Flows, and Related Fast-Moving Landslides in the Conterminous United States - US Geological Surevy Natural Hazards - Slope Failure - NaturalHazards.org The Liquid Earth , by Brenda Bell, The Atlantic Monthly TIPS FOR INCREASING YOUR AWARENESS OF LANDSLIDES - International Landslide Research Group Newsletter, Vol 9, no 3
    AZGS hazard links
    Radon Arsenic Subsidence Earthquakes ... Home

    134. Landslides
    landslides. Landslide in Conecuh County, Alabama, 1997 Landslide incidence is defined as the number of landslides that have occurred in a given
    http://www.gsa.state.al.us/gsa/landslides.html
    LANDSLIDES Landslide in Conecuh County, Alabama, 1997 WHAT IS A LANDSLIDE? A landslide is defined as a perceptible downward and outward movement of slope-forming soil, rock, and vegetation under the influence of gravity. WHAT CAUSES A LANDSLIDE? Landslides can be triggered by both natural and human-induced changes in the environment. These changes may result from weaknesses in the composition or structure of the rock or soil, heavy rain, or changes in ground-water level, seismic activity, or construction activity. Human- induced landslides may result from changes in slope caused by terracing for agriculture, cut-and-fill construction for highways, building construction, mining operations, and changes in irrigation or surface runoff. TYPES OF LANDSLIDES Rock falls are rapid movements of bedrock characterized by free-fall, bouncing, and rolling. A topple is a block of rock that tilts or rotates before falling to the slope below. Slides are movements of soil or rock along a distinct surface of rupture which separates the slide material from the more stable underlying material. The two major types of slides are rotational and translational slides Flows are mass movements of water-saturated material. Different types of flows include creep, debris flow, debris avalanche, earthflow, mudflow, and lahar.

    135. THEMIS: Image Detail
    Channel Wall landslides (Released 10 January 2005) The multiple landslides in this VIS image occur along a steep channel wall.
    http://themis.la.asu.edu/zoom-20050110a.html
    Channel Wall Landslides (Released 10 January 2005)
    Image Context:
    Context image credit: NASA/Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) Team
    [ Find on map: Javascript version ]
    [ Find on map: CGI version ]
    Parameter Value Parameter Value Latitude Instrument VIS Longitude Resolution (m) Image Size (pixels) Image Size (km) The multiple landslides in this VIS image occur along a steep channel wall. Note the large impact crater in the context image. The formation of the crater may have initially weakened that area of the surface prior to channel formation. The surface of these landslides is different from the giant Valles Marineris landslides, which have small ridges that radiate from the base of the slope to the margins of the slide. The surface features on these landslides appears to be small wavy ridges parallel to the end of the slide. [Questions? Email [Source: ASU THEMIS Science Team] Note: this THEMIS visual image has not been radiometrically nor geometrically calibrated for this preliminary release. An empirical correction has been performed to remove instrumental effects. A linear shift has been applied in the cross-track and down-track direction to approximate spacecraft and planetary motion. Fully calibrated and geometrically projected images will be released through the Planetary Data System in accordance with Project policies at a later time. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the 2001 Mars Odyssey mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. The Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) was developed by Arizona State University, Tempe, in collaboration with Raytheon Santa Barbara Remote Sensing. The THEMIS investigation is led by Dr. Philip Christensen at Arizona State University. Lockheed Martin Astronautics, Denver, is the prime contractor for the Odyssey project, and developed and built the orbiter. Mission operations are conducted jointly from Lockheed Martin and from JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

    136. THEMIS: Image Detail
    This VIS image shows several landslides within Eos Chasma. Many very large landslides have occurred within different portions of Valles Marineris.
    http://themis.la.asu.edu/zoom-20050103a.html
    Eos Chasma Landslides (Released 3 January 2005)
    Image Context:
    Context image credit: NASA/Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter (MOLA) Team
    [ Find on map: Javascript version ]
    [ Find on map: CGI version ]
    Parameter Value Parameter Value Latitude Instrument VIS Longitude Resolution (m) Image Size (pixels) Image Size (km) This VIS image shows several landslides within Eos Chasma. Many very large landslides have occurred within different portions of Valles Marineris. Note where the northern wall has failed in a upside-down bowl shape, releasing the material that formed the landslide deposit. [Questions? Email [Source: ASU THEMIS Science Team] Note: this THEMIS visual image has not been radiometrically nor geometrically calibrated for this preliminary release. An empirical correction has been performed to remove instrumental effects. A linear shift has been applied in the cross-track and down-track direction to approximate spacecraft and planetary motion. Fully calibrated and geometrically projected images will be released through the Planetary Data System in accordance with Project policies at a later time. NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory manages the 2001 Mars Odyssey mission for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, D.C. The Thermal Emission Imaging System (THEMIS) was developed by Arizona State University, Tempe, in collaboration with Raytheon Santa Barbara Remote Sensing. The THEMIS investigation is led by Dr. Philip Christensen at Arizona State University. Lockheed Martin Astronautics, Denver, is the prime contractor for the Odyssey project, and developed and built the orbiter. Mission operations are conducted jointly from Lockheed Martin and from JPL, a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.

    137. Reuters AlertNet - Floods, Landslides Kill Over 500 In Western India
    AlertNet provides news, information and analysis for everyone interested in emergency relief. AlertNet is run by Reuters Foundation.
    http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/SP311346.htm
    Alerting humanitarians to emergencies Username: Password: Sign me in automatically Get a password Forgot your password? Login Reuters websites United States Japan United Kingdom Other websites About AlertNet Why join AlertNet? Help You are here: Homepage Newsdesk > Floods, landslides kill over 500 in western India HOME Newsdesk NGO Latest EMERGENCIES ... Middle East COUNTRY PROFILES Select a country - Afghanistan - Albania - Algeria - Andorra - Angola - Antigua - Argentina - Armenia - Australia - Austria - Azerbaijan - Bahamas - Bahrain - Bangladesh - Barbados - Belarus - Belgium - Belize - Benin - Bhutan - Bolivia - Bosnia- Herzegovina - Botswana - Brazil - Brunei - Bulgaria - Burkina Faso - Burundi - Cambodia - Cameroon - Canada - Cape Verde - Central African Republic - Chad - Chile - China - Colombia - Comoros - Costa Rica - Croatia - Cuba - Cyprus - Czech Republic - Democratic Republic of Congo - Denmark - Djibouti - Dominica - Dominican Republic - East Timor - Ecuador - Egypt - El Salvador - Equatorial Guinea - Eritrea - Estonia - Ethiopia - Fiji - Finland - France - Gabon - Gambia - Georgia - Germany - Ghana - Greece - Grenada - Guatemala - Guinea - Guinea-Bissau - Guyana - Haiti - Honduras - Hungary - Iceland - India - Indonesia - Iran - Iraq - Ireland - Israel - Italy - Ivory Coast - Jamaica - Japan - Jordan - Kazakhstan - Kenya - Kiribati - Korea (South) - Kuwait - Kyrgyzstan - Laos - Latvia - Lebanon - Lesotho - Liberia - Libya - Liechtenstein - Lithuania - Luxembourg - Macedonia - Madagascar - Malawi - Malaysia - Maldives - Mali - Malta - Marshall Islands - Mauritania - Mauritius

    138. PEI Elections: Liberal Landslides And Tory Tides - Politics And Economy - CBC Ar
    If the province of PEI had a campaign slogan it would be of the.
    http://archives.cbc.ca/IDD-1-73-906/politics_economy/elections_pei/
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    Politics and Economy PEI Elections: Liberal landslides and Tory tides
    PEI Elections: Liberal landslides and Tory tides Click to Activate Topic Timeline
    If the province of PEI had a campaign slogan it would be of the "go big or go home" genre. From Liberal landslides to Tory sweeps, PEI elections have been showy and dramatic changings of the guard. But despite the spectacular overthrows, campaigns have been conducted as a sport of etiquette. CBC has covered the continuing electoral spectacle as Islanders waffled between the Liberal and Tory tides, confronted issues of party patronage, and elected the first woman and non-European premiers in Canada.
    Educational activities about

    PEI Elections: Liberal landslides and Tory tides
    Stunning upheaval: Alex Campbell's victory The Million-Acre Farm ... A gentleman's sport
    Young Liberal Alex Campbell woos voters with his visionary politics. (TV; runs 14:30)
    Tory leader Angus MacLean seeks a rural renaissance. (TV; runs 1:20)
    A history of PEI politics. (Radio; runs 12:06)

    139. UG Library: Off-campus Sign On
    Wileylandslides in Practice Investigation, Analysis, and landslides in Practice combines clearly written descriptions and reallife case landslides in Practice describes the technical tools needed to study
    http://www2.lib.uoguelph.ca/go/index.cfm?resource=14662

    140. Venus - Magellan
    landslides in Devana Chasma, Venus. Venus Magellan radar image of landslide debris in Devana Chasma on Venus. This image shows ridged walls with talus piles
    http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/imgcat/html/object_page/mgn_f20n280_1.html
    Venus - Magellan
    Landslides in Devana Chasma, Venus
    Magellan radar image of landslide debris in Devana Chasma on Venus. This image shows ridged walls with talus piles at their base, the result of avalanches down the steep sides. Devana Chasma is located in Beta Regio. (Magellan F-MIDR 20N280;1,framelet 29)
    Larger image: 651K
    High resolution tiff file (1.0 Mb)
    Date/Time (UT): N/A
    Distance/Range (km): 420.6
    Central Latitude/Longitude (deg): +20.00/280.42
    Orbit(s): 1901-1933
    Imaging Information
    Area or Feature Type: Landslide,Debris flow,Canyon
    Instrument: Synthetic Aperture Radar
    Instrument Resolution (pixels): 240 x 240, 8 bit
    Instrument Field of View (deg): 2.1 x 2.5 Filter: N/A Illumination Incidence Angle (deg): 44.5-45.2 Phase Angle (deg): Instrument Look Direction: Left Surface Emission Angle (deg): 44.5-45.2 Ordering Information CD-ROM Volume: MG_0046 NASA Image ID number: F-20N280;1 Other Image ID number: N/A NSSDC Data Set ID (Photo): 89-033B-01N NSSDC Data Set ID (CD): 89-033B-01F Other ID: N/A
    HOME MISSION INDEX FAQ
    Hardcopy images can be ordered through the NSSDC Request Office (request@nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov)

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