Water Stewardship Information Sources

ID 2702
Citation Schwab, JW, Geertsema, M and Blais-Stevens, A. 2004. The Khyex River landslide of November 28, 2003, Prince Rupert British Columbia Canada. Landslides 1L243-246.
Organization FLNRO
URL https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10346-004-0026-0
Abstract/Description or Keywords On November 28, 2003, at about 00:30 PST, 35 km east of Prince Rupert in northwestern British Columbia, an extremely rapid, retrogressive liquefaction earth flow, or a clay flow-slide, severed the natural gas pipeline. As a result, Prince Rupert residents were without natural gas heat for 10 days. The landslide has a steep main scarp that is 45 m high by 345 m wide. It consists of glaciomarine sediments mantled by rubbly colluvium lying on, and against smooth bedrock of the valley wall. It covers an area of 32 ha, and displaced about 4.7 M m3 of material. This displaced material flowed up and down river over a distance of 1.7 km, blocked the river, and caused flooding upstream for a distance of 10 km. This landslide is the most recent of four large landslides that have occurred over the last four decades in glaciomarine sediments in northwestern British Columbia.
Information Type Article
Regional Watershed Khyex River
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