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When soil, rock, and other earth debris can no longer hold it together and gives way to gravity, landslides happen.
The downward force of a landslide can
move slowly, (a mere millimeters per year) or quickly with disasterous
effects. Landslides can even occur underwater, causing tidal waves and
damage to coastal areas. These landslides are called submarine
landslides.
Landslides
can be triggered by earthquakes, volcanic activity, changes in
groundwater, a disturbance or change of slope. Intense rainfall over a
short period of time tends to trigger shallow, fast-moving mud and
debris flows. Slow, steady rainfall over a long period of time may trigger deeper, slow-moving landslides. Different materials behave differently, too.
Every year as much as $2 billion in
landslide damage occurs in the United States. In a record-breaking
storm in the San Francisco area in January 1982, some 18,000 debris
flows were triggered during a single night! Property damage was over
$66 million, and 25 people died.
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