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  2. Downhill creep - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Downhill_creep

    Downhill creep, also known as soil creep or commonly just creep, is a type of creep characterized by the slow, downward progression of rock and soil down a low grade slope; it can also refer to slow deformation of such materials as a result of prolonged pressure and stress.

  3. Mass wasting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_wasting

    The surface soil can migrate under the influence of cycles of freezing and thawing, or hot and cold temperatures, inching its way towards the bottom of the slope forming terracettes. Landslides are often preceded by soil creep accompanied with soil sloughing—loose soil that falls and accumulates at the base of the steepest creep sections. [8]

  4. Earthflow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthflow

    It is an intermediate type of mass wasting that is between downhill creep and mudflow. The types of materials that are susceptible to earthflows are clay, fine sand and silt, and fine-grained pyroclastic material. [1] When the ground materials become saturated with enough water, they will start flowing (soil liquefaction). Its speed can range ...

  5. Landslide classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landslide_classification

    The landslide causes are the reasons that a landslide occurred in that location and at that time and may be considered to be factors that made the slope vulnerable to failure, that predispose the slope to becoming unstable. The trigger is the single event that finally initiated the landslide.

  6. Landslide mitigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landslide_mitigation

    The natural profile is often highly irregular with large areas of natural creep, so that its shallow development can make some areas unserviceable as a cutting or infill point. Where the buried shapes of older landslides are complicated, depositing infill material in one area can trigger a new landslide.

  7. Sediment transport - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sediment_transport

    Soil creep; Tree throw; Movement of soil by burrowing animals; Slumping and landsliding of the hillslope; These processes generally combine to give the hillslope a profile that looks like a solution to the diffusion equation, where the diffusivity is a parameter that relates to the ease of sediment transport on the particular hillslope. For ...

  8. Mudflow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mudflow

    Landslide is a more general term than mudflow. It refers to the gravity-driven failure and subsequent movement downslope of any types of surface movement of soil, rock, or other debris. The term incorporates earth slides, rock falls, flows, and mudslides, amongst other categories of hillslope mass movements. [12]

  9. Colluvium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colluvium

    Erosion on Koh Tao Island. Colluvium (also colluvial material or colluvial soil) is a general name for loose, unconsolidated sediments that have been deposited at the base of hillslopes by either rainwash, sheetwash, slow continuous downslope creep, or a variable combination of these processes.