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Landslides

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Landslides:
about this Topic
landslides Landslides are catastrophic events, which can destroy lives and property. CMG research aims to better understand the origin of landslides in marine and coastal environments and the resulting impacts on people, property, and the environment. High priority is given to densely populated areas with high frequency or large-scale landslides.
Other related USGS websites:
National Landslides Information Center
National Landslides Hazards Program
El Niņo Home Page

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Items below are listed from most recently updated to least recently updated.

These are results 1 through 25 of 29 matches.

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
Tsunami and Earthquake Research at the USGS
Description: General information on how earthquakes generate tsunamis and summaries of tsunami research.
updated: 2008-08-01       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Coastal Change Hazards: Hurricanes and Extreme Storms
Description: This project investigates the coastal impacts of hurricanes and extreme storms, such as Hurricanes Isabel (2003), Dennis (1999), Bonnie & Georges (1998), and winter storms, such as those associated with the 1997-98 El Niņo.
updated: 2008-01-16       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Photographs icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
USGS Monterey Bay Science
Description: USGS Monterey Bay Science - USGS research in the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary and coastal watersheds of central California
updated: 2008-01-01       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
USGS Coastal Change Hazards
Description: USGS Coastal Change Hazards - Focuses on hurricanes, tsunamis, sea-level rise, shoreline erosion, wetland destruction, and other issues relevant to coastal zone management and disaster preparedness.
updated: 2008-01-01       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon Movies icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
Coastal and Marine Knowledge Bank
Description: An initiative to develop and present a national-scale, interdisciplinary scientific framework for marine environments, the coastal zone, and coastal watersheds
updated: 2007-11-28       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
Professional Paper 1661-E: Seismic Stability of the Duwamish River Delta, Seattle, Washington
Description: The delta front of the Duwamish River valley near Elliott Bay and Harbor Island is founded on young Holocene deposits shaped by sea-level rise, episodic volcanism, and seismicity. These river-mouth deposits are highly susceptible to seismic soil liquefaction and are potentially prone to submarine landsliding and disintegrative flow failure. A highly developed commercial-industrial corridor, extending from the City of Kent to the Elliott Bay/Harbor Island marine terminal facilities, is founded on the young Holocene deposits of the Duwamish River valley. The deposits of this Holocene delta have been shaped not only by relative sea-level rise but also by episodic volcanism and seismicity. Ground-penetrating radar (GPR), cores, in situ testing, and outcrops are being used to examine the delta stratigraphy and to infer how these deposits will respond to future volcanic eruptions and earthquakes in the region. A geotechnical investigation of these river-mouth deposits indicates high initial liquefaction susceptibility during earthquakes, and possibly the potential for unlimited-strain disintegrative flow failure of the delta front.
updated: 2007-11-02       pages include: Publications icon

General Information icon General Information
El Niņo Home Page
Description: El Niņo information with links to a broad range of topics such as Floods, Landslides, Coastal Hazards, Climate, News Releases.
updated: 2007-09-30       pages include:

Research Project icon Research Project
National Assessment of Coastal Change Hazards
Description: The National Assessment of Coastal Change Hazards is a multi-year undertaking to identify and quantify the vulnerability of U.S. shorelines to coastal change hazards such as the effects of severe storms, sea-level rise, and shoreline erosion and retreat. It will continue to improve our understanding of processes that control these hazards, and will allow researchers to determine the probability of coastal change locally, regionally, and nationally. The Assessment will deliver these data and assessment findings about coastal vulnerability to coastal managers, other researchers, and the general public.
updated: 2007-09-29       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon Publications icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
Open-File Report 2007-1079: Terrestrial LIDAR Investigation of the December 2003 and January 2007 Activations of the Northridge Bluff Landslide, Daly City, California
Description: On December 20, 2003 and again on January 1, 2007, landslides occurred along the coastal bluff that forms the west boundary of Daly City, California sending debris as far as 290 meters downhill and 90 meters into the ocean. This area is known for large landslide events where 150-meter tall coastal bluffs extend southward along the west boundary of San Francisco and San Mateo Counties (Fig. 1). The 2003 and 2007 landslide events occurred west of Northridge Drive in Daly City and just south of Avalon Canyon, which bisects the bluffs in this area (Fig. 2). Residential development, utility lines and roads occupy the land immediately east of this location. As part of a comprehensive project to investigate the failure mechanisms of coastal bluff landslides in weakly lithified sediments along the west coast of the United States, members of the U.S. Geologic Survey (USGS) Coastal and Marine Geology (CMG) Program performed reconnaissance mapping of these landslide events including collection of high-resolution topographic data using CMG's terrestrial LIDAR laser scanning system. This report provides a brief background on each landslide event and presents topographic datasets collected following each event. Downloadable contour data, images, and FGDC-compliant metadata of the surfaces generated from the LIDAR data are also provided. LIDAR data collection and processing techniques used to generate the datasets are outlined. Geometric and volumetric measurements are also presented along with high-resolution cross-sections through various areas of the slide masses and discussion concerning the slides present (2007) configuration is provided.
updated: 2007-04-16       pages include: Publications icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Research Projects: Coastal and Marine Catastrophic Hazards - USGS WCMG
Description: Description of research project.
updated: 2005-07-25       pages include: Research Materials icon

Publication icon Publication
Effects of Major Storms on Pacific Islands - USGS Fact Sheet
Description: Tropical storms of various kinds are as much a depositional event as an erosional event. Much attention is given to the destructive aspects of major storms because of the loss of life and property, but little is known about their beneficial effects to coastal accretion. While we can usually measure and map the instantaneous effects of a tropical storm, we can only speculate about the long-term effects. Geologic mapping by the U.S. Geological Survey in areas prone to storm effects can give us opportunities to minimize losses by identifying locations most likely to suffer.
updated: 2004-03-02       pages include: Publications icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
Gas (Methane) Hydrates -- A New Frontier - USGS Fact Sheet
Description: Methane trapped in marine sediments as a hydrate represents such an immense carbon reservoir that it must be considered a dominant factor in estimating unconventional energy resources; the role of methane as a 'greenhouse' gas also must be carefully assessed.
updated: 2004-03-02       pages include: Maps icon Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary Geological Processes and Framework - USGS Fact Sheet
Description: The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) will move its Pacific Marine Geology program to a new location at the University of California at Santa Cruz (UCSC) and we are excited about our role in the marine sciences community around Monterey Bay. There is much to learn in the region, not only as a result of new opportunities in the Marine Sanctuary, but also that knowledge gained here may be transferred to our studies of similar environments in other parts of the world.
updated: 2004-03-02       pages include: Maps icon Publications icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
USGS OFR 03-411 - Preliminary Hydrodynamic Analysis of Landslide-Generated Waves in Tidal Inlet, Glacier Bay National Park, Alaska
Description: A landslide block perched on the northern wall of Tidal Inlet, Glacier Bay National Park (Figure 1), has the potential to generate large waves in Tidal Inlet and the western arm of Glacier Bay if it were to fail catastrophically. Landslide-generated waves are a particular concern for cruise ships transiting through Glacier Bay on a daily basis during the summer months. The objective of this study is to estimate the range of wave amplitudes and periods in the western arm of Glacier Bay from a catastrophic landslide in Tidal Inlet. This study draws upon preliminary findings of a field survey by Wieczorek et al. (2003), and evaluates the effects of variations in landslide source parameters on the wave characteristics.
updated: 2003-10-29       pages include: Publications icon

Publication icon Publication
An Overview of Coastal Land Loss: With Emphasis on the Southeastern United States
Description: In states bordering the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, vast areas of coastal land have been destroyed since the mid 1800s as a result of natural processes and human activities. The physical factors that have the greatest influence on coastal land loss are reductions in sediment supply, relative sea level rise, and frequent storms, whereas the most important human activities are sediment excavation, river modification, and coastal construction. As a result of these agents and activities, coastal land loss is manifested most commonly as beach/bluff erosion and coastal submergence.
updated: 2003-08-20       pages include: Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
Fact Sheet 020-98: Popular Beach Disappears Underwater in Huge Coastal Landslide--Sleeping Bear Dunes, Michigan
Description: In February 1995, a 1,600-foot stretch of popular beach at Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore suddenly slid into the waters of northeastern Lake Michigan. The National Park Service (NPS) immediately requested the assistance of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) in evaluating the hazard at the lakeshore. To protect the public, USGS and NPS scientists are conducting studies that will help predict when the landslide-prone area will move again
updated: 2003-03-18       pages include: Maps icon Educational Materials icon Publications icon Photographs icon

Data Set icon Data Set
Hawaiian Islands GLORIA Imagery
Description: GLORIA sidescan sonar imagery of the Hawaiian Islands, showing index map and downloadable quadrangles of sea-floor imagery.
updated: 2001-07-19       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Remote Video Monitoring
Description: Remote Video Monitoring (RVM) systems provide a means of automatically acquiring video data from remote locations and returning them to a central laboratory computer for processing. This project makes use of RVM technology to monitor coastal change at locations in Florida, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Washington.
updated: 2000-10-02       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Photographs icon

Photograph icon Photographs
El Niņo/La Niņa Coastal Comparison Photography - Oregon
Description: La-Niņa Mapping, May, 1999 - A Follow-on Experiment to the El-Niņo Coastal Mapping, October 1997 / April 1998. These pages include pre/post-El-Niņo rainfall data from the Laurel Mountain Monitoring Station, as well as a set of oblique aerial photography of portions of the Oregon coast.
updated: 1999-12-08       pages include: Data Sets icon Photographs icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Gas Hydrates in the Gulf of Mexico
Description: Investigation of potential gas-hydrate deposits and possible links between hydrate occurrence and sea-floor failures using remote-sensing technology.
updated: 1999-09-22       pages include: Research Materials icon Maps icon Photographs icon

Publication icon Publication
High-Resolution Multibeam Survey off Honolulu, Hawaii
Description: AGU Abstract on sonar mapping survey of seafloor off Honolulu Hawaii
updated: 1999-08-09       pages include: Publications icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
About Gas Hydrates and a USGS gas hydrate project
Description: Questions and answers about submarine gas hydrates: an ice-like crystalline solid formed of water and gas that is found in places under the sea floor and has important implications to techniques of deep-sea drilling and future energy supplies.
updated: 1999-03-08       pages include: Educational Materials icon

Research Project icon Research Project
Monterey Bay Marine Sanctuary Studies
Description: The USGS Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary Project gathers, interprets, and distributes geologic information - tools necessary for sound resource protection and preservation of the federally established Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary. This web site provides access to that information.
updated: 1999-02-22       pages include: Research Materials icon Data Sets icon Maps icon

Photograph icon Photographs
Coastal Erosion from El-Niņo Winter Storms - Oblique Aerial Photography
Description: USGS acquired baseline precision-located oblique still and video photography coverage of over 1000 km of coastline from the west coast of the U.S. in October, 1997, in anticipation of storms generated by the El-Niņo warming of the Pacific Ocean. A follow-up mission was completed in April, 1998 after the storm season.
updated: 1998-12-16       pages include: Data Sets icon Photographs icon

Educational Material icon Educational Materials
Coastal Erosion Along the U.S. West Coast During the 1997-98 El Niņo: Expectations and Observations
Description: This survey of 1200 km of representative reaches of the U.S. west coast both prior to and following the 1997-98 El Niņo winter storms includes an interactive display of the mapped changes in coastal topography due to erosion, deposition, and landslides.
updated: 1998-12-08       pages include: Data Sets icon Maps icon Educational Materials icon Photographs icon

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