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Mass Movements: Types, Factors, and Implications

June 1, 2024 2289 0

Movements that carry rock debris down slopes because of gravity are called mass movements. Unlike other forces like air, water, or ice, gravity directly pulls the debris downhill. This means the debris itself doesn’t need help moving, but it can pick up air, water, or ice as it goes. These movements play a big role in shaping the Earth’s surface, especially in hilly or mountainous areas. Factors favoring mass movements: weak materials, steep slopes, rainfall, and lack of vegetation.

Mass Movements

  • Speed: Mass movements can be slow or fast and affect both shallow and deep layers of materials.
  • Types of Mass Movements: Include creep, flow, slide, and fall.
  • Role of Gravity: Gravity pulls on everything, whether it’s solid bedrock or loose weathered debris.
  • Role of Weathering: Although weathering isn’t necessary for mass movement, it does make it easier.
    • It happens more often on slopes with weathered materials compared to those with unweathered ones.
  • Nature of Mass Movements:  These are solely influenced by gravity and do not involve agents like water, glaciers, wind, or waves.
    • This movement  involves the shifting of materials from one place to another, facilitated by gravity.
  • Factors: Certain conditions make mass movements more likely, such as weak materials, steep slopes, and heavy rainfall. Thinly bedded rocks, cliffs, and lack of vegetation also contribute to the occurrence of mass movements.
  • Activating Causes: Various factors can trigger mass movements, including removal of support below materials, increase in slope gradient, and overloading of materials. Earthquakes, heavy rainfall, and excessive water drawdowns can also activate these movements.
  • Prevention Measures: 
    • Retaining walls, slope stabilization, and vegetation conservation can help prevent mass movements.
    • Proper land use planning and avoiding activities that disturb slopes can also reduce the risk of mass movements.

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Major Classifications of Mass Movements: Slow vs. Rapid Movements 

  • Mass movements can be classified into two major categories based on their speed: slow movements (creep and heave) and rapid movements (flow and slide).
  • Heave: It means heaving up of soils due to frost growth and other causes, flow and slide are the three forms of movement. 

Slow Movements

  • Characteristics: It occurs on moderately steep, soil-covered slopes; and involves extremely gradual and imperceptible material displacement.
  • Creep: It can occur on moderately steep slopes; movement of material is extremely slow; material involved can be soil or rock debris.
  • Solifluction: another form of creep that consists of slow downslope flow of saturated soil or fine-grained rock debris
    • It occurs in moist temperate areas due to surface melting of frozen ground and prolonged rainfall.

Rapid Movements

  • Most prevalent in humid climatic regions, occurs over gentle to steep slopes. 
  • Earthflow: It is the movement of water-saturated clayey or silty materials down low-angle terraces or hillsides.
  • Mudflows: They occur when heavy rainfall saturates thick layers of weathered materials, flowing slowly or rapidly down the channels like a stream of mud.
  • Debris avalanches: These are fast-moving mass movements that occur in narrow tracks on steep slopes, resembling snow avalanches, and can be much faster than mudflows.
  • Landslide: It refers to rapid and perceptible movements; the materials involved are relatively dry. Depending upon the type of movement of materials, there are several types:
  • Slump: It is the slipping of one or several units of rock debris with a backward rotation concerning the slope over which the movement takes place. 
  • Debris Slide: It is the rapid rolling or sliding of earth debris without backward rotation of mass.
  • Rockslide: It is the sliding of individual rock masses down bedding, joint, or fault surfaces.
  • Rockfall: It is the free fall of rock blocks over steep slopes while maintaining some distance from the slope’s surface.
  • Himalayas are mostly made up of sedimentary rocks and unconsolidated and semi-consolidated deposits; slopes are steep. Thus, landslides are quite frequent.
  • Nilgiri are relatively tectonically stable and are mostly made up of very hard rocks; mechanical weathering due to temperature changes and ranges is pronounced. They receive heavy amounts of rainfall over a short period. So, it is a landslide and debris avalanche-prone zone.

 

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Conclusion

Mass movements are natural processes where materials on slopes move downhill due to gravity. These movements can range from slow, gradual ones like creep, to faster ones like flow and slide. Factors such as slope steepness, material type, and weather conditions influence the occurrence of mass movements. Understanding these processes is important for managing and mitigating their potential risks in vulnerable areas.

Related Articles 
Landform Evolution: The Impact of Mass Movement on Earth’s Surface Changing Rainfall Patterns in India’s Sub-Districts
Soil Formation: Key Factors, Climate, Evolution Indian Weather Seasons: Understanding the Annual Climate Cycle

 

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