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  Information - NH3.02 Large slope instabilities: from dating, triggering and evolution modelling to hazard assessment

Event Information
Large slope instabilities have been frequently recognised in mountainous areas in different lithological (sedimentary, igneous, methamorphic rocks) and geological domains (cordillera, volcanic, etc.). Slow to very fast moving, complex mass movements have been recognized and sometimes described as strongly interrelated. Many types of slope instabilities can be grouped within this broad class, each presenting different types of hazard and risk. Some major aspects of these slope instabilities are still understudied and debated, namely: - their regional distribution and relevance, - triggering and controlling factors, including possible climatic changes, - dating of initial movements and reactivation episodes, - style and state of past and present activity, - passive and/or active control by structural-tectonic elements of the bedrock geology, - hydrological boundary conditions, - possible evolution and modelling, - assessment of related hazard, - influence of external anthropogenic factors and effects on structures. Study of these instabilities requires a multidisciplinary approach involving geology, geomorphology, geomechanics, hydro-geochemistry, and geophysics. Trenching and drilling can be used for material characterization, recognition of episodes of activity, and sampling in slow slope movements. Geophysical survey methods can used to assess both the geometrical and geomechanical characteristics of the unstable mass. Different dating techniques can be applied to determine the age of movements. Many modelling approaches can be applied to evaluate instability and failure (displacement and velocity thresholds, etc.), triggering mechanisms (rainfall, seismicity, volcanic eruption, deglaciation, etc.), failure propagation, rapid mass movements (rock avalanches, debris avalanches and flows), and related secondary failures (rock fall and debris flows). Studies of hydraulic and hydrologic boundary conditions and hydrochemistry are involved, both at the moment of initial failure (e.g. during deglaciation) and, later, during reactivation. The impacts of such instabilities on structures and human activities can be substantial and of a variety of forms (e.g. deformation or failure of structures and infrastructure, burial of developed areas, etc).

Preliminary List of Solicited Speakers
Ken Hewitt

Co-Sponsorship
GM

General Statement
The information contained hereafter has been compiled and uploaded by the Session Organizers via the "Organizer Session Form". The Session Organizers have therefore the sole responsibility that this information is true and accurate at the date of publication, and the conference organizer cannot accept any legal responsibility for any errors or omissions that may be made, and he makes no warranty, expressed or implied, with regard to the material published.



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