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Landslides Mudslides/Mudflows Rockslides Creep Slump SINKHOLES COASTAL EROSION Mass Wasting/Mass Movement The process by which soil and rock move down-slope. Erosion; the process by which natural forces move weathered rock & soil from one place to another. Gravity The material moved by erosion is called SEDIMENT. This may include pieces of rock or soil. Mass movement happens when gravity moves sediment downhill. Mass movement can be rapid or slow and is caused by gravity. Landslides are the most destructive of the four types of mass movement. Landslides happen when rock & soil slides quickly down steep slopes. This is a picture of a landslide. A type of mass wasting. Mudflows are very dangerous. Mudflows occur when water (as much as 60% of the flow), rock & soil moves rapidly downhill Rockslides are caused when rocks become loose and are pulled down by gravity. Rocks may become loose by the agents of erosion such as wind and water. Creep is very slow movement. Creep is often barely noticeable, you may eventually see the effects of the slow movement in telephone poles, fence posts & trees leaning at odd angles This is a diagram of creep. The hillside slowly slips over many years from water and gravity. Slump occurs when one huge mass falls together. Occurs when a mass of rock & soil suddenly slip down a slope in one huge mass Slump happened when water soaks the bottom of soil rich in clay In this picture the land has slumped into the road below. An avalanche is the same as a landslide but it is made of snow and ice. This is a picture of an avalanche. It is similar to a landslide with ice and snow instead of rock. Other problems associated with erosion; Sink holes Coastal Erosion United Streaming Clip http://www.uwec.edu/jolhm/cave2005/grou p4/Cave%20Formation.htm United Streaming - Deposition Deposition As the slightly acidic rain water passes through rock, it dissolves away calcite and enlarges cave passages. Cave formations grow as the calcite is deposited. Water slowly seeps into limestone and drips Flowstone indicates a steady source of water over a long time period. Forms when limestone dissolves and the roof or top of the cave collapses. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ll_hCCPu0 -8