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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

    A landslide in which the sliding surface is located within the soil mantle or weathered bedrock (typically to a depth from few decimeters to some meters) is called a shallow landslide. Debris slides and debris flows are usually shallow.

  5. A landslide destroyed my North Carolina home during Hurricane ...

    www.aol.com/finance/landslide-destroyed-north...

    5 minutes could get you up to $2M in life insurance coverage — with no medical exam or blood test. Hurricane Helene caused a flurry of flooding, which can trigger landslides. However, landslides ...

  6. 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 ...

  7. Landslide classification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landslide_classification

    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, in a very highly cited publication, David Varnes noted this imprecise usage and proposed a new, much tighter scheme for the classification of mass movements and ...

  8. Rockslide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rockslide

    Rockslide at Oddicombe Beach in Devon, UK Rockslides in Nigeria Landslips. A rockslide is a type of landslide caused by rock failure in which part of the bedding plane of failure passes through compacted rock and material collapses en masse and not in individual blocks.

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