Mass Movement/Mass wasting/Slope Movement

When the gravitational force acting on a slope exceeds its resisting force, slope failure (mass wasting) occurs. The slope material’s strength and cohesion and the amount of internal friction between material help maintain the slope’s stability and are known collectively as the slope’s shear strength. The steepest angle that a cohesionless slope can maintain without losing its stability is known as its angle of repose. When a slope possesses this angle, its shear strength perfectly counterbalances the force of gravity acting upon it.Mass wasting, also known as slope movement or mass movement, is the geomorphic process by which soil, sand, regolith, and rock move downslope under the force of gravity. Types of mass wasting include creep, slides, flows, topples, and falls, each with its own characteristic features, and taking place over timescales from seconds to years. Mass wasting occurs on both terrestrial and submarine slopes, and has been observed on Earth, Mars, Venus, and Jupiter’s moon Io.

Mass wasting may occur at a very slow rate, particularly in areas that are very dry or those areas that receive sufficient rainfall such that vegetation has stabilized the surface. It may also occur at very high speed, such as in rock slides or landslides, with disastrous consequences, both immediate and delayed, e.g., resulting from the formation of landslide dams.

Factors that change the potential of mass wasting include: change in slope angle; weakening of material by weathering; increased water content; changes in vegetation cover; and overloading.

The importance of water in Mass Movement

Although water is not directly involved as the transporting medium in mass-wasting processes, it does play an important role. Think about building a sandcastle on the beach. If the sand is totally dry, it is impossible to build a pile of sand with a steep face like a castle wall. If the sand is somewhat wet, however, one can build a vertical wall. If the sand is too wet, then it flows like a fluid and cannot remain in position as a wall.

Water can increase or decrease the stability of a slope depending on the amount present. Small amounts of water can strengthen soils because the surface tension of water gives the soil a lot of cohesion. This allows the soil to resist erosion better than if it were dry. If too much water is present the water may act to increase the pore pressure, reducing friction, and accelerating the erosion process and resulting in different types of mass wasting (i.e. mudflows, landslides, etc.). A good example of this is t

Types of mass movement

Types of mass movement are distinguished based on how the soil, regolith or rock moves downslope as a whole.

Creeps

Soil creep is a long term process. The combination of small movements of soil or rock in different directions over time are directed by gravity gradually downslope. The steeper the slope, the faster the creep. The creep makes trees and shrubs curve to maintain their perpendicularity, and they can trigger landslides if they lose their root footing. The surface soil can migrate under the influence of cycles of freezing and thawing, or hot and cold temperatures, inching its way towards the bottom of the slope forming terracettes. This happens at a rate that is not noticeable to the naked eye.

Landslides

A landslide, also called a landslip, is a rapid movement of a large mass of earth and rocks down a hill or a mountainside. Little or no flowage of the materials occurs on a given slope until heavy rain and resultant lubrication by the same rainwater facilitate the movement of the materials, causing a landslide to occur. The common forms of landslides are slump, debris slide, rock slide, rock fall, debris fall and avalanche.

Flows

Movement of soil and regolith that more resembles fluid behavior is called a flow. These include avalanches, mudflows, debris flows, earth flow, lahars and sturzstroms. Water, air and ice are often involved in enabling fluidlike motion of the material.

Topples

Topples are instances when blocks of rock pivot and fall away from a slope.

Slump

A slipping of coherent rock material along the curved surface of a decline. Slumps involve a mass of soil or other material sliding along a curved surface (shaped like a spoon). It forms a small, crescent-shaped cliff, or abrupt scarp at the top end of the slope. There can be more than one scarp down the slope.

Falls

A fall, including rockfall, is where regolith cascades down a slope, but is not of sufficient volume or viscosity to behave as a flow. Falls are promoted in rocks which are characterised by presence of vertical cracks. Falls are a result of undercutting of water as well as undercutting of waves. They usually occur at very steep slopes such as a cliff face. The rock material may be loosened by earthquakes, rain, plant-root wedging, expanding ice, among other things. The accumulation of rock material that has fallen and resides at the base of the structure is known as talus.

Triggers and Factors

Soil and regolith remain on a hillslope only while the gravitational forces are unable to overcome the frictional forces keeping the material in place (see Slope stability). Factors that reduce the frictional resistance relative to the downslope forces, and thus initiate slope movement, can include:

  • Seismic shaking
  • Increased overburden from structures
  • Increased soil moisture
  • Reduction of roots holding the soil to bedrock
  •  Undercutting of the slope by excavation or erosion
  • Weathering by frost heave
  • Bioturbation

The Force Behind

Gravity is the force behind these movements.

Gravity is a force that acts everywhere on the Earth’s surface, pulling everything in a direction toward the center of the Earth. On a flat surface, parallel to the Earth’s surface, the force of gravity acts downward. So long as the material remains on the flat surface it will not move under the force of gravity.

Links and Sources:

Wikipedia

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Ten Years of the Biological Diversity Act In India:The Indifference

Biodiversity

Ten years after introducing a Biodiversity Act, India is yet to put it to serious use although several large “development” projects have invited controversy for their likely impact on biodiversity,according to an article puplished in EPW. A National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) was created in 2003, but the government is not bound by its recommendations.

The Act was meant to provide for the conservation of biological diversity, But, given the reality in which it operates, the question is whether the Act will come anywhere near effecting biodiversity justice.

It is the responsibility of central government is required by the CBD and the Act to develop national strategies, plans and programmes for conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity. Between 2000 and 2003, a civil society group was commissioned to help prepare India’s National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan, but the final report was not accepted by the government which released its own draft National Biodiversity Action Plan made by technocrats.

The Act only requires “consultation” with local communities which are nowhere near making decisions on local resources as prescribed by both the Act and the CBD. The Act does not take a clear position on Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and there has been no instance of the NBA invoking powers to oppose grant of IPR in any foreign country on biological resources or people’s knowledge from India.Links and Sources:

SciDev, EPW

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kerryl29's avatar1001 Scribbles

There are few things you can use to produce impact in your image making exploits that are more powerful than the concept of contrast.  Contrast is such a naturally provocative element that it can produce strong results in a wide variety of ways via many different photographic genres.  I’ll focus here on nature photography, but it should be a simple matter to see how you can apply the approach to numerous other areas.

Let’s take a look at a few examples to help illustrate the point.

Luminosity Contrast

One particularly useful way to use contrast is in the most photographically elementary way:  light.  By focusing on contrasts in luminosity and applying your exposure settings and compositional choices accordingly, you can create some pretty dramatic results where they otherwise wouldn’t exist.

For instance, in the image accompanying this subtopic, I slightly underexposed the scene so that the backlit leaves would be…

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Jeremy's avatarOpen Geography

Wen Stephenson’s piece in the Phoenix is getting a lot of attention right now. Stephenson argues that there is a massive culture of shirking going on about global climate change–among journalists. He argues, very passionately, that climate change is the top issue of our times, and that even in an election, media coverage of the issue is nowhere near where it needs to be: which is that this is an emergency demanding crisis-level coverage.

James Fallows of the Atlantic has already said about the piece:

At a time when both parties are saying that this is an “exceptionally important” election, yet neither will even discuss an issue that (I contend) will loom larger in historical accounts of this era than 99 percent of what is discussed in speeches, news analyses, and debates, this article is worth reading and thinking about.

I can’t do anything about media coverage, although the…

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