Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 2011
Citation Geertsema, M., J.J. Clague, J.W. Schwab and S.G. Evans (2006) An overview of recent large catastrophic landslides in northern British Columbia, Canada, Engineering Geology, 83(1-3):120-143. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.enggeo.2005.06.028
Organization Ministry of Forests and Range; Simon Fraser University; University of Waterloo
URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0013795205002267
Abstract/Description or Keywords At least thirty-eight, large, catastrophic landslides, each either larger than 0.5 M m3 or longer than 1 km, have occurred in northern British Columbia in the last three decades. The landslides include low-gradient flowslides in cohesive sediments, long-runout rock slides (rock avalanches), and complex rock slide-flows. The flowslides have occurred in a variety of sediments, including glaciolacustrine silt, clay-rich till, and clay-rich colluvium. The rock failures have happened in weak shale overlain by sandstone and volcanic rocks. The frequency of large landslides in northern British Columbia appears to be increasing, suggesting a link to climate change. Large landslide; Climate change; Permafrost degradation; Northern British Columbia
Information Type Article
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Contact Name Marten Geertsema
Contact Email [email protected]