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landslide
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landslide

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Types of landslide. A mudflow is a tongue of mud that slides downhill. A slump is a fall of a large mass that stays together after the fall. A landslip occurs when beds of rock move along a lower bed.

Sudden downward movement (see mass movement) of a mass of soil or rocks from a cliff or steep slope. Landslides happen when a slope becomes unstable, usually because the base has been undercut or because materials within the mass have become wet and slippery.

A mudflow happens when soil or loose material is soaked so that it no longer adheres to the slope; it forms a tongue of mud that reaches downhill from a semicircular hollow. A slump occurs when the material stays together as a large mass, or several smaller masses, and these may form a tilted steplike structure as they slide. A landslip is formed when beds of rock dipping towards a cliff slide along a lower bed. Earthquakes may precipitate landslides.


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``This area, you're into the Angeles National Forest and pretty hard rock, the amount of landsliding is quite a bit less than other areas,'' said Tim McCrink, senior engineering geologist with the California Geological Survey.
We suspect that a lot of the bigger, known tsunamis involved some landsliding.
The South Fork of the Salmon River, once one of the most productive salmon fisheries in the West, has been literally "blown out" by landsliding from roads, clearcuts, and other poorly conceived forest practices.
 
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