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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

    A landslide, also called a landslip, [10] is a relatively rapid movement of a large mass of earth and rocks down a hill or a mountainside. Landslides can be further classified by the importance of water in the mass wasting process. In a narrow sense, landslides are rapid movement of large amounts of relatively dry debris down moderate to steep ...

  4. Landslide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landslide

    In traditional usage, the term landslide has at one time or another been used to cover almost all forms of mass movement of rocks and regolith at the Earth's surface. In 1978, geologist David Varnes noted this imprecise usage and proposed a new, much tighter scheme for the classification of mass movements and subsidence processes. [ 26 ]

  5. Lower Greensand Group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lower_Greensand_Group

    Landslides are occasional, rapid movements of a mass of earth or rock sliding along a steep slope. They tend to occur after sustained heavy rain, when the water saturates overlying rock, making it heavy and liable to slide, others occur via soil creep is a very slow movement, occurring on very gentle slopes because of the way soils repeatedly ...

  6. 10 Surprising Facts About Earth Day - AOL

    www.aol.com/10-surprising-facts-earth-day...

    Earth Day is on April 22 because of college schedules. The date for Earth Day was largely dictated by the schedules of the college students Hayes and Nelson were hoping to attract. April 22 fell ...

  7. Landslide classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landslide_classification

    With the introduction of water and the thick soil, there is less cohesion and the soil flows out in a landslide. With every landslide more bedrock is scoured out and the hollow becomes deeper. After time, colluvium fills the hollow, and the sequence starts again.

  8. Earthflow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthflow

    An earthflow (earth flow) is a downslope viscous flow of fine-grained materials that have been saturated with water and moves under the pull of gravity. It is an intermediate type of mass wasting that is between downhill creep and mudflow .

  9. Slump (geology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slump_(geology)

    Heavy Moisture led to land slides of blocks of overhanging earth. Thus the slumps retained their original layering sequence. A slump is a form of mass wasting that occurs when a coherent mass of loosely consolidated materials or a rock layer moves a short distance down a slope. [1]