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Download Debris Flows and Avalanches
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Debris Flows and Avalanches Volcanic Debris Flow (Lahar) • Definition – Any mass movement involving volcanically derived, sand-size material or finer. – This may be total mass moved. – More commonly this serves as a matrix for the movement of larger volcanic clasts. – Water rich Definition • Thus range from slumped deposits of ash and hyaloclastites to megabreccias. • Deposits may be relatively local (few 100 m’s in length and few meters thick) • To regional (10’s of km’s long and > 100 m in thickness) Formation • During eruptions • Reworking of volcanic debris during times of quiescence or after volcano has become extinct • Ways of formation: – – – – – – – Heavy rains Melting snow or ice (Jokulhaups) Walls of crater lake collapse Hydrothermal alteration- clay-rich rocks Caldera collapse and mass wasting of walls Earthquakes Pyroclastic flows mix with water Mass Movement • Once under way controlling factors for flow length and speed are: – Grain size – Grain size distribution-electrochemical forces-clay and silt-size – Solid to water ratio- laminar flow Thicker near source Follows valleys and depressions, fans out away from valleys Can cause erosion by undercutting banks of streams or those of steep slopes- adds to sediment load (bulking up) Osceola Lahar • • • • • Mt. Rainer 5600 before present Valley fill-85 to 200 m Flow > 120 km into puget sound Area covered was 350 cubic km Hundreds of thousands of people live on deposits Criteria for Recognition • Heterolithic, clasts boulders to gravel, angular to sub round • Massive and poorly sorted • Matrix supported • Inverse grading at base • Bedding alignment of clasts Fine fraction commonly clay-rich Mixed crystal populations Toe boulder rich Overlain by bedded sedimentary units (siltstone, sandstone), these may be lense-like Laterally into turbidites Overlain by turbidites Rip-ups at base, deformation of underlying beds Debris Avalanche Deposits • Large scale landslide associated with volcanic activity- moves under gravity • Term avalanche used to emphasize the fact that material has little or no water in it when emplaced- may have steam, gas, ice, snow but not liquid water • Debris Flows or lahars are rapid, watersaturated flows. • Many debris flows originate as debris avalanches and become lahars by incorporating large amounts of water –St. Helen’s, Mt. Rainer Magmatic Phreatic Earthquake Debris Avalanches • First recognized and described from 1980 St. Helen’s eruption • Here DA buried 60 km2 of terrain to an average depth of 45m, maximum depth was 200m, deposits 2km wide and 25km long • Became debris flows by sliding into Spirit Lake and the Touttle river DA- Divisions • Block and matrix facies • Block- large fragment of the volcano with any internal textures well preserved (> 1m) • Matrix is a mixture of various kinds of volcanic fragments derived from various parts of the source volcano. Soil, gravel, wood, ice may be incorporated during flow Characteristics • Hummocky topography • Steep sided cliffs at distal and lateral edges • Horse-shoe shaped source crater Composite Volcanoes: 57 active in Japan 28 have DA 1.6-32km