WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?

On August 8, 2010 in the northwestern Chinese province of Gansu, rainstorm-triggered debris flow devastated the small county of Zhouqu. A modeling study, using a new multiple-phase scalable and extensible geo-fluid model, suggests that the cause is the result of an intersection of several events. Th...

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Main Authors: Diandong Ren, Lance Leslie, Mervyn Lynch, Qingyun Duan, Yongjiu Dai, Wei Shangguan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Lomonosov Moscow State University 2013-03-01
Series:Geography, Environment, Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ges.rgo.ru/jour/article/view/122
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spelling doaj-2a844f1d7c974635ade8cbb5e8a698602021-07-28T21:10:05ZengLomonosov Moscow State UniversityGeography, Environment, Sustainability2071-93882542-15652013-03-0161677910.24057/2071-9388-2013-6-1-72-75121WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?Diandong Ren0Lance Leslie1Mervyn Lynch2Qingyun Duan3Yongjiu Dai4Wei Shangguan5ASDI, Curtin University of Technology, WA U1987The University of Oklahoma; 120 David L. Boren Blvd., Suite 5900, Norman, Oklahoma 73072-73071Department of Imaging and Applied Physics, Curtin University of TechnologyCollege of Global Change and Earth System Sciences, Beijing Normal University; 19 Xinjiekouwai, Beijing, China 100875College of Global Change and Earth System Science, Beijing Normal University; 19 Xinjiekouwai, Beijing 100875 ChinaCollege of Global Change and Earth System Science, Beijing Normal University; 19 Xinjiekou Road, Haidian, Beijng, China, 100875On August 8, 2010 in the northwestern Chinese province of Gansu, rainstorm-triggered debris flow devastated the small county of Zhouqu. A modeling study, using a new multiple-phase scalable and extensible geo-fluid model, suggests that the cause is the result of an intersection of several events. These were a heavy rainstorm, not necessarily the result of global warming, which triggered the landslide and followed a drought that created surface cracks and crevasses; the geology of the region, notably the loess covering heavily weathered surface rock; and the bedrock damage, which deepened the surface crevasses, inflicted by the 7.9 magnitude Wenchuan earthquake of May 12, 2008. Deforestation and topsoil erosion also contribute. The modeling results underscore the urgency for a high priority program of re-vegetation of Zhouqu county, without which the region will remain exposed to future disastrous, “progressive bulking” type landslides.https://ges.rgo.ru/jour/article/view/122progressive bulking, graded sloping, extreme precipitation, vegetation effects on storm-triggered landslides
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diandong Ren
Lance Leslie
Mervyn Lynch
Qingyun Duan
Yongjiu Dai
Wei Shangguan
spellingShingle Diandong Ren
Lance Leslie
Mervyn Lynch
Qingyun Duan
Yongjiu Dai
Wei Shangguan
WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?
Geography, Environment, Sustainability
progressive bulking, graded sloping, extreme precipitation, vegetation effects on storm-triggered landslides
author_facet Diandong Ren
Lance Leslie
Mervyn Lynch
Qingyun Duan
Yongjiu Dai
Wei Shangguan
author_sort Diandong Ren
title WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?
title_short WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?
title_full WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?
title_fullStr WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?
title_full_unstemmed WHY WAS THE AUGUST 2010 ZHOUQU LANDSLIDE SO POWERFUL?
title_sort why was the august 2010 zhouqu landslide so powerful?
publisher Lomonosov Moscow State University
series Geography, Environment, Sustainability
issn 2071-9388
2542-1565
publishDate 2013-03-01
description On August 8, 2010 in the northwestern Chinese province of Gansu, rainstorm-triggered debris flow devastated the small county of Zhouqu. A modeling study, using a new multiple-phase scalable and extensible geo-fluid model, suggests that the cause is the result of an intersection of several events. These were a heavy rainstorm, not necessarily the result of global warming, which triggered the landslide and followed a drought that created surface cracks and crevasses; the geology of the region, notably the loess covering heavily weathered surface rock; and the bedrock damage, which deepened the surface crevasses, inflicted by the 7.9 magnitude Wenchuan earthquake of May 12, 2008. Deforestation and topsoil erosion also contribute. The modeling results underscore the urgency for a high priority program of re-vegetation of Zhouqu county, without which the region will remain exposed to future disastrous, “progressive bulking” type landslides.
topic progressive bulking, graded sloping, extreme precipitation, vegetation effects on storm-triggered landslides
url https://ges.rgo.ru/jour/article/view/122
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