This document discusses snowpack mechanics and avalanche dynamics. It describes how factors like gravity, temperature, slope angle and loading can stress the snowpack over time. It identifies potential weak layers in the snowpack like surface hoar, facets or crusts that can lead to fracture initiation when stress exceeds the strength of the snowpack. It explains the three main types of avalanche release - loose snow avalanches, wet snow avalanches and slab avalanches - and discusses how climate zones impact avalanche characteristics.
An avalanche is a large mass of snow that falls and moves rapidly down a mountainside, sometimes killing people. They can be triggered by earthquakes creating a weak layer of snow or heavy snowfall. A minor avalanche has killed over 900 people. Landslides are also ground movements that occur when the soil or rock fails, but they are caused by earthquakes damaging the earth's surface rather than snow, and major landslides have killed over 1,000 people.
An avalanche is a mass of snow sliding down a mountain. There are different types including surface avalanches which involve layers of snow with different properties sliding over each other, and full depth avalanches where the entire snow cover from the ground up slides. Avalanches are caused by various environmental factors including heavy snowfall, steep slopes, vibration, warm temperatures and layers of snow and ice building up. They can damage life, property and infrastructure and cause flash flooding, but are also a natural part of mountain ecosystems. Understanding avalanche patterns and avoiding likely start zones are important for preventing danger.
Snow Avalanche and its Impacts, Prevention and Challengesijsrd.com
油
Snow avalanche are a significant hazard in mountainous environments around the world. Snow avalanches pose a significant hazard to human populations and infrastructure in mountainous regions. Avalanche forecasting and hazard reduction methods rely heavily on the evaluation of snowpack information collected in the field. Hence understanding the spatial patterns of snowpack instabilities and their environment determinants is crucial. Avalanche impacts in India, include fatilities, and are summarize for public and residential area like ski areas, roads, and resource industries. Avalanche hazard methods, in which zoning, explosive control, forecasting. Problems of current avalanche hazard is solving these problem is identified with resources industries, backcountry recreation and residential areas. Snow avalanches are a significant natural hazard that impact roads, structures and threaten human lives in mountain terrain. Snow avalanche is not only the snow cover over the mountain side but also the later snowfall intensity. In this case study, we quantify the spatial patterns of the thickness and strength of an observed buried surface hoar layer and test for associations with spatial estimates of incoming radiation during the surface hoar formation period. In India, is attempt using terrain and satellite images and terrain characteristics with meteorology information. Contributory factors in retaining the snowfall a change and snow pack characteristics were rank and assign weightage the avalanche initiate based on the event in the region. Spatial distribution of snow accumulation zone, Snow fall area and snow pack stability assessment criteria was developed. Snowfall, temperature and wind are three factors that quickly change avalanche conditions.
An avalanche is a rapid flow of snow down a sloping surface that is usually triggered by a failure in the snowpack. There are two main types of avalanches - loose snow avalanches which involve snow with little cohesion, and slab avalanches where a cohesive slab slides on a weaker layer. Many factors influence avalanche formation including temperature, wind, vegetation, snowpack characteristics, and terrain. Avalanches can be triggered naturally or artificially and precautions include preventing weak layers from forming through controlled explosions or directing snow placement, while barriers can help mitigate damage.
This document discusses avalanches and defines them as rapid flows of snow down sloping surfaces that are triggered in starting zones and form gravity currents. It describes how avalanches occur due to factors like temperature differences between snow layers, evaporation of lower layers, and loss of grip. The anatomy of an avalanche includes the starting zone where snow can fracture and slide, the track path down the slope, and the runout zone where snow comes to a stop. Formation involves terrain angle and slope, snowpack structure with weak layers below slabs, and weather conditions like temperature rises or storms. Types include loose snow, slab, powder, and wet snow avalanches. Effects range from positive like habitat to negative like damage and
Thunderstorms are storms that produce rain, wind, and sometimes hail or snow. They start when moisture, unstable air, and an uplifting force combine. While thunderstorms can occur year-round, they are most common in the spring and summer in the midwestern and southern United States, especially Florida. The document provides tips for staying safe during a thunderstorm such as taking shelter if lightning is within 30 seconds of thunder and waiting 30 minutes after the last lightning flash to exit shelter.
Lightning occurs when large static electric charges build up in storm clouds and discharge to the ground. It moves in a stepped leader pattern from the cloud to the ground. Thunder is the sound of the surrounding air rapidly expanding from being heated by the lightning. There are different types of lightning such as cloud-to-ground, cloud-to-cloud, and ground-to-cloud.
This document discusses thunder, lightning, and storms. It explains that thunder is the sound caused when lightning heats the air, causing it to expand rapidly outward in a shock wave. Lightning occurs when heavy negatively charged particles in a storm cloud sink to the bottom, building up an electrical charge until releasing a spark. While storms can be dangerous and cause power outages or fires, some of these risks can be prevented by seeking shelter when lightning is possible.
Thunderstorms form when warm, humid air rises rapidly and condenses into clouds. Lightning results from a buildup of positive and negative charges within storm clouds and between clouds and the ground. Thunderstorms can also spawn tornadoes if wind shear is present. Most tornadoes are relatively small and short-lived, but the most intense can completely demolish buildings.
Thunderstorms are storms that produce lightning and thunder. They form from single or clusters of cumulonimbus clouds and can affect small or large areas. There are different types of thunderstorms including air-mass and severe thunderstorms. Thunderstorms go through various stages of development from cumulus to mature to dissipating. Microbursts are strong localized downdrafts under thunderstorms that can cause damage. Lightning forms due to separation of charges within thunderclouds and can be dangerous, so safety precautions should be taken during storms.
This document discusses various natural disasters including avalanches, floods, earthquakes, tornados, volcanoes, hurricanes, wildfires, tsunamis. It provides brief definitions and descriptions of each type of natural disaster, noting that they can cause significant damage but are natural occurrences beyond full human control. Natural disasters discussed include landslides, storms, seismic events, and fires.
1) Thunderstorms result from the rapid upward movement of warm, moist air within clouds and occur inside warm, moist air masses and at fronts.
2) There are four main types of thunderstorms: single-cell, multicell cluster, multicell lines, and supercells, with supercells being the strongest and most associated with severe weather.
3) In 2010, a severe thunderstorm struck parts of Bangladesh and eastern India, killing over 140 people and leaving nearly 500,000 homeless or affected. In 1939, a tropical storm made landfall in California, causing flooding that killed 45 people.
Thunderstorms form from moisture, unstable air that rises rapidly, and lift from factors like fronts or mountains. Thunder is caused by lightning opening a small channel in the air, which then collapses back, creating the sound we hear. While thunderstorms produce noise and light, it is the heavy rain and wind that can damage homes and property, potentially leaving people without shelter or food.
This document defines and describes different types of natural disasters: earthquakes cause sudden shaking of the ground, volcanoes are mountains that erupt hot material from within, tsunamis are large sea waves caused by earthquakes or landslides, avalanches involve snow and ice falling down mountains, tornadoes are powerful whirling winds, hailstorms produce balls of ice falling like rain, heatwaves bring extended periods of unusually hot weather, and floods result in water covering dry land.
This document provides information about different types of plate boundaries including convergent, divergent, and transform boundaries. It describes how each boundary forms different geological features like mountains, trenches, and faults. It also discusses earthquakes, seismic waves, tsunamis, volcanoes, and the structure of the Earth's interior.
The document discusses thunderstorms and provides safety information. It defines a thunderstorm and explains that they require moisture, unstable air, and lift. Lightning is caused by the buildup of positive and negative charges, while thunder comes from lightning setting off sound waves. The document advises that if thunder roars to go indoors, as being outside is dangerous during a storm. It also provides tips for indoor safety during a thunderstorm and what to do if someone is struck by lightning.
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. Most tornadoes have wind speeds under 110 mph and dissipate after traveling a short distance. During storms, warm air rises while cold air sinks, causing the warm air to twist into a funnel-shaped spiral. Wall clouds are large cloud formations that often precede tornado formation. The deadliest tornadoes have caused hundreds of deaths and billions in damage, like the Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011. Tornado Alley in the central US has the highest frequency of tornadoes. Doppler radar and other technologies help forecasters monitor conditions for potential tornado development.
Lightning is a large-scale electrical discharge that occurs during thunderstorms. It is caused by the buildup of positive and negative charges within a thunderstorm. When the buildup becomes large enough, a lightning bolt occurs as the charges suddenly equalize. There are several types of lightning including sheet lightning, cloud-to-ground lightning, and heat lightning. Thunder is the sound caused by the rapid heating and expansion of the air along the lightning channel.
This document contains information about different types of natural disasters including avalanches, earthquakes, hurricanes, landslides, thunderstorms, tornados, tsunamis, and volcanoes. Each disaster type has a brief definition and image associated with it. The document provides a high-level overview of common natural disasters and hazards.
Weather Education lesson plan created for the Instructional Tech class at Emporia State University. The subject of the the lesson covers winter weather, thunderstorms and tornadoes, with students experiencing one through VR technology.
Volcanoes form when magma rises from deep within the Earth and erupts at the surface through openings called vents. As eruptions continue over time, layers of lava and ash build up to form volcanic mountains. There are three main types of volcanoes that occur in different areas: shield volcanoes like those in Hawaii form from gentle eruptions of basaltic lava; cinder cones are formed by explosive eruptions that eject tephra; and composite volcanoes can have both gentle and explosive eruptions of different materials over time. The type of eruption depends on the viscosity of the magma and amount of dissolved gases.
Volcanoes form when magma from under the Earth's surface escapes through openings called vents. There are over 600 active volcanoes worldwide, with the most active being Kilauea in Hawaii. Magma is less dense than the surrounding rock so it moves upward towards the surface, eventually erupting and causing effects like lava flows, ash in the air, and new land formations, as well as destruction. Volcanoes occur at divergent plate boundaries where plates move apart, convergent boundaries where they move together, and at hot spots where the Earth's crust is thinner.
1. The document lists four names: Elsa Maharani, Esti Ratnasari, Putri Ayu, and Rifqannisa Divaby.
2. Mammatus clouds do not produce severe weather by themselves, but are often associated with large thunderstorm clouds. They form on the underside of the anvil cloud portion of a thunderstorm.
3. Mammatus clouds form when ice crystals that were lifted high into the thunderstorm cloud begin sinking below the main cloud, creating pouches underneath the anvil cloud base.
Many natural changes are undesirable.It is necessary that these changes are properly controlled . We must study these changes to learn how they are caused and find ways to control them to safe guard ourselves.
Thunder and Lightning CAI,PPT-Alphonsa Joseph, Social ScienceAchu Jose
油
The document provides directions for a computer-assisted lesson on thunder and lightning. It outlines the following:
- The lesson will cover the topic of thunder and lightning through relevant slides and pictures.
- Learners can navigate slides using their mouse and click on textboxes for responses.
- The direction provided by the computer should be followed.
- Brain teasers and relaxers are included to develop concepts and allow for self-checking with explanations.
- At the end, a "Test Your Knowledge" session allows learners to recap the lesson.
This PowerPoint presentation teaches 3rd to 5th grade students about tornadoes. It defines tornadoes, explains how they form due to differing wind speeds at different altitudes, and describes how they are rated on the Fujita scale based on wind speed and damage. The presentation notes that tornadoes can reach speeds up to 300 mph and have paths up to a mile wide and 50 miles long. It includes fun facts about tornadoes and recommends taking shelter in an interior room without windows if one occurs. Students are instructed to take a 10 question quiz after viewing the presentation to test their understanding.
A2 CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY: HAZARDOUS ENVIRONMENTS - HAZARDS RESULTING FROM ATMOSPHERIC DISTURBANCES. It contain case studies: Hurricane Katrina 2005, Cloud Seeding in New Zealand 1950-1970.
This document discusses different types of folds that can form in the Earth's crust. It describes how folds are caused by plastic deformation from compressive forces acting under conditions of stress, pressure, temperature gradients. There are three main mechanisms of folding: flexural folding where both competent and incompetent beds are bent, shear folding which involves slip along fractures, and flow folding where rocks fold like a fluid at high temperatures and depths. Common fold types include anticlines, synclines, and monoclines. Folds can form from tectonic processes like horizontal compression or mantle convection, or from non-tectonic processes like hillside creep or collapse structures.
The document describes glaciers and periglacial landforms and processes. It defines different types of glaciers and explains glacial processes like formation, movement, erosion, transportation and deposition. This creates landforms like moraines, drumlins and eskers. Periglacial landscapes lacking glacial ice are also described, featuring permafrost and patterned ground. The Pleistocene epoch is summarized, noting continental glaciation, sea level changes, and paleoclimate studies of past climate variations.
Thunderstorms form when warm, humid air rises rapidly and condenses into clouds. Lightning results from a buildup of positive and negative charges within storm clouds and between clouds and the ground. Thunderstorms can also spawn tornadoes if wind shear is present. Most tornadoes are relatively small and short-lived, but the most intense can completely demolish buildings.
Thunderstorms are storms that produce lightning and thunder. They form from single or clusters of cumulonimbus clouds and can affect small or large areas. There are different types of thunderstorms including air-mass and severe thunderstorms. Thunderstorms go through various stages of development from cumulus to mature to dissipating. Microbursts are strong localized downdrafts under thunderstorms that can cause damage. Lightning forms due to separation of charges within thunderclouds and can be dangerous, so safety precautions should be taken during storms.
This document discusses various natural disasters including avalanches, floods, earthquakes, tornados, volcanoes, hurricanes, wildfires, tsunamis. It provides brief definitions and descriptions of each type of natural disaster, noting that they can cause significant damage but are natural occurrences beyond full human control. Natural disasters discussed include landslides, storms, seismic events, and fires.
1) Thunderstorms result from the rapid upward movement of warm, moist air within clouds and occur inside warm, moist air masses and at fronts.
2) There are four main types of thunderstorms: single-cell, multicell cluster, multicell lines, and supercells, with supercells being the strongest and most associated with severe weather.
3) In 2010, a severe thunderstorm struck parts of Bangladesh and eastern India, killing over 140 people and leaving nearly 500,000 homeless or affected. In 1939, a tropical storm made landfall in California, causing flooding that killed 45 people.
Thunderstorms form from moisture, unstable air that rises rapidly, and lift from factors like fronts or mountains. Thunder is caused by lightning opening a small channel in the air, which then collapses back, creating the sound we hear. While thunderstorms produce noise and light, it is the heavy rain and wind that can damage homes and property, potentially leaving people without shelter or food.
This document defines and describes different types of natural disasters: earthquakes cause sudden shaking of the ground, volcanoes are mountains that erupt hot material from within, tsunamis are large sea waves caused by earthquakes or landslides, avalanches involve snow and ice falling down mountains, tornadoes are powerful whirling winds, hailstorms produce balls of ice falling like rain, heatwaves bring extended periods of unusually hot weather, and floods result in water covering dry land.
This document provides information about different types of plate boundaries including convergent, divergent, and transform boundaries. It describes how each boundary forms different geological features like mountains, trenches, and faults. It also discusses earthquakes, seismic waves, tsunamis, volcanoes, and the structure of the Earth's interior.
The document discusses thunderstorms and provides safety information. It defines a thunderstorm and explains that they require moisture, unstable air, and lift. Lightning is caused by the buildup of positive and negative charges, while thunder comes from lightning setting off sound waves. The document advises that if thunder roars to go indoors, as being outside is dangerous during a storm. It also provides tips for indoor safety during a thunderstorm and what to do if someone is struck by lightning.
A tornado is a violently rotating column of air that extends from a thunderstorm to the ground. Most tornadoes have wind speeds under 110 mph and dissipate after traveling a short distance. During storms, warm air rises while cold air sinks, causing the warm air to twist into a funnel-shaped spiral. Wall clouds are large cloud formations that often precede tornado formation. The deadliest tornadoes have caused hundreds of deaths and billions in damage, like the Joplin, Missouri tornado of 2011. Tornado Alley in the central US has the highest frequency of tornadoes. Doppler radar and other technologies help forecasters monitor conditions for potential tornado development.
Lightning is a large-scale electrical discharge that occurs during thunderstorms. It is caused by the buildup of positive and negative charges within a thunderstorm. When the buildup becomes large enough, a lightning bolt occurs as the charges suddenly equalize. There are several types of lightning including sheet lightning, cloud-to-ground lightning, and heat lightning. Thunder is the sound caused by the rapid heating and expansion of the air along the lightning channel.
This document contains information about different types of natural disasters including avalanches, earthquakes, hurricanes, landslides, thunderstorms, tornados, tsunamis, and volcanoes. Each disaster type has a brief definition and image associated with it. The document provides a high-level overview of common natural disasters and hazards.
Weather Education lesson plan created for the Instructional Tech class at Emporia State University. The subject of the the lesson covers winter weather, thunderstorms and tornadoes, with students experiencing one through VR technology.
Volcanoes form when magma rises from deep within the Earth and erupts at the surface through openings called vents. As eruptions continue over time, layers of lava and ash build up to form volcanic mountains. There are three main types of volcanoes that occur in different areas: shield volcanoes like those in Hawaii form from gentle eruptions of basaltic lava; cinder cones are formed by explosive eruptions that eject tephra; and composite volcanoes can have both gentle and explosive eruptions of different materials over time. The type of eruption depends on the viscosity of the magma and amount of dissolved gases.
Volcanoes form when magma from under the Earth's surface escapes through openings called vents. There are over 600 active volcanoes worldwide, with the most active being Kilauea in Hawaii. Magma is less dense than the surrounding rock so it moves upward towards the surface, eventually erupting and causing effects like lava flows, ash in the air, and new land formations, as well as destruction. Volcanoes occur at divergent plate boundaries where plates move apart, convergent boundaries where they move together, and at hot spots where the Earth's crust is thinner.
1. The document lists four names: Elsa Maharani, Esti Ratnasari, Putri Ayu, and Rifqannisa Divaby.
2. Mammatus clouds do not produce severe weather by themselves, but are often associated with large thunderstorm clouds. They form on the underside of the anvil cloud portion of a thunderstorm.
3. Mammatus clouds form when ice crystals that were lifted high into the thunderstorm cloud begin sinking below the main cloud, creating pouches underneath the anvil cloud base.
Many natural changes are undesirable.It is necessary that these changes are properly controlled . We must study these changes to learn how they are caused and find ways to control them to safe guard ourselves.
Thunder and Lightning CAI,PPT-Alphonsa Joseph, Social ScienceAchu Jose
油
The document provides directions for a computer-assisted lesson on thunder and lightning. It outlines the following:
- The lesson will cover the topic of thunder and lightning through relevant slides and pictures.
- Learners can navigate slides using their mouse and click on textboxes for responses.
- The direction provided by the computer should be followed.
- Brain teasers and relaxers are included to develop concepts and allow for self-checking with explanations.
- At the end, a "Test Your Knowledge" session allows learners to recap the lesson.
This PowerPoint presentation teaches 3rd to 5th grade students about tornadoes. It defines tornadoes, explains how they form due to differing wind speeds at different altitudes, and describes how they are rated on the Fujita scale based on wind speed and damage. The presentation notes that tornadoes can reach speeds up to 300 mph and have paths up to a mile wide and 50 miles long. It includes fun facts about tornadoes and recommends taking shelter in an interior room without windows if one occurs. Students are instructed to take a 10 question quiz after viewing the presentation to test their understanding.
A2 CAMBRIDGE GEOGRAPHY: HAZARDOUS ENVIRONMENTS - HAZARDS RESULTING FROM ATMOSPHERIC DISTURBANCES. It contain case studies: Hurricane Katrina 2005, Cloud Seeding in New Zealand 1950-1970.
This document discusses different types of folds that can form in the Earth's crust. It describes how folds are caused by plastic deformation from compressive forces acting under conditions of stress, pressure, temperature gradients. There are three main mechanisms of folding: flexural folding where both competent and incompetent beds are bent, shear folding which involves slip along fractures, and flow folding where rocks fold like a fluid at high temperatures and depths. Common fold types include anticlines, synclines, and monoclines. Folds can form from tectonic processes like horizontal compression or mantle convection, or from non-tectonic processes like hillside creep or collapse structures.
The document describes glaciers and periglacial landforms and processes. It defines different types of glaciers and explains glacial processes like formation, movement, erosion, transportation and deposition. This creates landforms like moraines, drumlins and eskers. Periglacial landscapes lacking glacial ice are also described, featuring permafrost and patterned ground. The Pleistocene epoch is summarized, noting continental glaciation, sea level changes, and paleoclimate studies of past climate variations.
The document describes the process of glacial movement and ice sheet formation. Snow accumulates over thousands of years and is compressed into ice, forming ice sheets. The bottom layer of ice experiences basal melt due to pressure, lubricating the ice and allowing it to slide over bedrock downhill via gravity in a process called basal slip. Ice streams and glaciers carry the ice to coastal regions, where some forms ice shelves that float in deeper waters and calve off icebergs.
This document discusses various geological concepts including:
1. The different types of stresses that cause rock deformation and the formation of faults and folds.
2. The rock cycle and how rocks are formed through internal and external geological processes.
3. How mountain ranges are formed through processes like orogeny and the development of accretionary prisms and collision zones.
4. The concept of isostasy and how it relates to equilibrium between the lithosphere and mantle.
5. How different landforms are shaped by factors such as climate, rock type, and geological activity.
The document discusses key glacial processes including freeze-thaw weathering, erosion through plucking and abrasion, and movement and deposition of material. Freeze-thaw weathering occurs as water enters cracks in bedrock and expands during freezing. Erosion removes rock through plucking, where blocks of rock are torn away, and abrasion, where rock fragments scrape bedrock. Glaciers transport material and eventually deposit moraines when melting reduces their ability to carry material further.
The document summarizes information about avalanches including:
1. Avalanches occur when a slab of snow fractures and slides rapidly down a sloping surface, gaining speed and power.
2. They are triggered by a combination of factors like snowpack structure, weather events, steep slopes, and human activity which can weaken bonding between snow layers.
3. There are different types of avalanches including loose snow avalanches, slab avalanches, powder snow avalanches, and wet snow avalanches. Mitigation techniques aim to stabilize weak layers in the snowpack and redirect avalanches away from infrastructure and areas with human activity.
This document summarizes key aspects of glacial environments and glacial landforms. It describes how snow accumulates over time to form glacial ice, and the different zones within glaciers. It also discusses the two main types of glaciers - mountain/alpine glaciers and continental ice sheets - and how they form and move. The document outlines various erosional landforms created by glaciers such as cirques, ar棚tes, and U-shaped valleys. It also describes depositional features including moraines, eskers, kames, and drumlins. In summary, the document provides an overview of glacial formation, movement, erosion processes, and resulting landforms.
This document discusses slope stability and mass wasting. It describes the different types of mass wasting including slumps, slides, falls, and creep. The major factors influencing slope stability are the strength of the material, geologic features, and water which reduces friction. Building practices can greatly impact risk of slope failure, with mitigation involving avoiding unstable areas and practices that increase slope stability. Specific risks in Minnesota include soft, weak materials in valleys and hillslopes which result in more gradual failures like creep and occasional slumps.
Mass movement refers to different types of erosion caused by gravity that make mountains smaller over time. The main agents of erosion are gravity, glaciers, water, and wind. Erosion wears away surface materials and transports them elsewhere via processes like deposition, where sediment is dropped when the agent of erosion loses energy. Types of gravity-caused erosion include slumps, ice wedging, rock falls, rock slides, and mudflows, which typically occur quickly after heavy rain or earthquakes and move materials down steep slopes. Methods to help slow mass movement include planting vegetation, installing drainage pipes, and building retaining walls, but mass movement can never be fully stopped.
The document discusses different types of mass movement and erosion caused by wind and glaciers. It describes mass movement as the downslope movement of loose materials due to gravity, which can include processes like creep, slump, mudflow, avalanche, and landslide. It also discusses variables that influence mass movement, such as material weight, resistance to movement, earthquakes, water, and slope angle. The document then covers different types of wind movements including deflation, abrasion, ventifacts, dunes, and loess. It concludes by describing the two types of glaciers and various glacial erosion and deposition features including hanging valleys, cirques, U-shaped valleys, horns, aretes, outwash plains, drum
This document provides an introduction to describing natural landscapes. It discusses key components of natural landscapes including variations within a landscape from climatic, tectonic and erosion processes. It also addresses how human activities and cultural perspectives can impact natural landscapes. Settings like the Amazon Basin and Tongariro Volcanic Centre in New Zealand are given as examples. The formation of different landforms through geological processes like folding, faulting and volcanism are explained. Erosion, transportation and deposition processes are also summarized.
This document discusses modeling of land ice sheets and their impact on climate. It summarizes different approaches that can be used to model ice sheet dynamics, including the shallow-ice approximation and shallow-shelf approximation, which make simplifying assumptions about stress and shear. It also discusses the importance of surface and basal mass balance, temperature dynamics, and friction in modeling ice sheets accurately. The key properties of ice sheets that are important to model are their mass and thickness over time.
This document discusses different types of mass movements such as landslides, rock falls, avalanches, mud flows, and debris flows. It provides details on the anatomy, causes, and factors involved in various mass movements. Some key points covered include:
1) Mass movements are caused by gravity pulling material downslope, and can be triggered by events like heavy rainfall or earthquakes. They include slow movements like creep as well as sudden failures.
2) Factors like steep slopes, water, weak earth materials, vegetation loss, and earthquakes can all contribute to slope instability and mass movements.
3) Different types of mass movements include falls, flows, slides, and subsidence - ranging from very fast
This document discusses different types of mass movements such as landslides, rock falls, avalanches, mud flows, and debris flows. It describes key concepts related to mass movements including their anatomy, causes, triggers, and classification. Specifically, it discusses how gravity, water, earth materials, slope steepness, vegetation, climate, and time can all contribute to slope instability and mass wasting events. The document also provides examples of different mass movement types including rotational and translational landslides, falls, flows, slides, and subsidence.
This document summarizes various landforms and the geological processes that create them. It discusses both internal forces like earthquakes and volcanoes, as well as external forces like erosion, weathering, streams, glaciers and waves that shape the Earth's surface over time. Specific landforms are examined like mountains, plains, plateaus and valleys, as well as features caused by folding, faulting, volcanic activity, deposition and more. Examples throughout illustrate these concepts.
Snow refers to frozen crystalline water that forms and falls from the atmosphere and accumulates on surfaces. Orographic lifting occurs when air masses are forced up mountainsides, cooling and causing precipitation. Avalanches are rapid flows of snow down slopes that are usually triggered by additional weight from snowfall that exceeds the snowpack's strength. They can be started by a small amount of snow and propagate rapidly, entraining large volumes of snow.
AS GEOGRAPHY - ROCKS AND WEATHERING: SLOPE PROCESSES AND DEVELOPMENTGeorge Dumitrache
油
Mass movements are large-scale movements of earth that are not caused by rivers, glaciers, or waves. They include slow movements like soil creep and fast movements like avalanches. Mass movements are caused by a reduction in the internal strength of a slope or an increase in downward forces. Common types of mass movements are falls, slides, slumps, flows, and avalanches.
Changes to Surface of Earth Review constructiveanddestructiveforces powerpoin...SadafQasim3
油
analyze and design structural members subjected to tension, compression, torsion and bending using fundamental concepts of stress, strain, elastic behavior and inelastic behavior.
conduct themselves professionally and with regard to their responsibilities to society, especially with respect to designing structures to prevent failure.
Changes to Surface of Earth Review constructiveanddestructiveforces powerpoin...SadafQasim3
油
1) Back fill with a sloping surface exerts a total active pressure Pa on the wall of height H and acts at
a) H/4 above the base parallel to base
b) H/2 above the base parallel to base
c) H/3 above the base parallel to base
d) H/5 above the base parallel to base
2) Sand particles are made of
a) Rock minerals
b) Kaolinite
c) Illite
d) Montmorillonite
3) A failure wedge develops if a retaining wall
a) Moves away from the backfill
b) Moves towards the backfill
c) Sinks downwards
d) Stresses equally by vertical and horizontal forces
4) The shearing strength of a cohesion-less soil depends upon
a) Dry density
b) Rate of loading
c) Confining pressure
d) Nature of loading
5) A partially saturated sample of soil has a unit weight of 2.0 g/cm3 and specific gravity of soil particles is 2.6. If the moisture content in the soil is 20%, the degree of saturation is
a) 20 %
b) 77 %
c) 92 %
d) None of these
Unlocking Opportunities for Talented Athletes.pdfjinny kaur
油
LPU (Lovely Professional University) offers scholarships for sports persons to encourage and support their participation in various sports activities. These scholarships are designed to provide financial assistance to deserving athletes, helping them balance their academic and athletic pursuits. The benefits include:
Tuition Fee Waiver: Sports scholarships often provide a partial or full waiver on tuition fees based on the level of achievement and performance in sports.
Accommodation and Mess Charges: Some scholarships also cover accommodation and mess charges, reducing the overall cost of living on campus.
Priority in Admissions: Athletes may receive priority during the admission process, making it easier to secure a seat.
Training Facilities: LPU provides state-of-the-art training facilities for athletes, ensuring they have access to the best infrastructure.
Coaching Support: You may receive specialized coaching and mentoring from experienced trainers and coaches to enhance your performance.
Participation in Competitions: Scholarships may cover the cost of participation in national and international competitions, providing exposure and opportunities for further growth.
Career Opportunities: Apart from financial benefits, sports scholarships can open doors to future career opportunities in sports-related fields.
Hockey India: A Story of Pride, Passion, and Perseverance"Gayatri Patel
油
Get ready to be inspired by the story of Indian hockey! This presentation takes you through the highs and lows, the victories and setbacks, and the unwavering commitment of our hockey heroes."
TANGKI4D MERUPAKAN SLOT GACOR GAMPANG JACKPOT & PENYEDIA ID PRO 2025 TEPERCAYATANGKI4D
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SELAMAT KEPADA MEMBER KAMI YANG BERHASIL WD HANYA DENGAN MODAL 100.000 BAWA PULANG 12JT DALAM HITUNGAN MENIT
TUNGGU APA LAGI UPGRADE ID MU MENJADI ID PRO 2025 DI #TANGKI4D #Tangki4dexclusive #tangki4dlink #tangki4dvip #bandarsbobet #idpro2025 #stargamingasia #situsjitu #jppragmaticplay #scatternagahitam
Intangibles in Sports Betting: How Pro Bettors WinJoe Duffy
油
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2. Objectives can you: describe how gravity, temperature and slope angle affect the snow pack over time? identify potential stress points in the snow pack? describe differences between point and fracture initiation?
24. Avalanche Characteristics by Climate Zone Factors Maritime Intermountain Continental Altitude 4,000-7,000 7,000-11,000 10,000-14,000 Cumulative Snowfall 600 + 400 250 Storm Snowfall Many 12+ Some 12+ Few 12+ Temperature Seldom<0 o F <0 o & >32 o F <32 o F Wind Moderate Strong Very strong Usual Type of Avalanche Slab (damp-wet) Slab (damp-dry) Slab (dry) Release Direct Direct Often Delayed Example Squaw Valley, CA Alta, UT Berthoud Pass, CO
25. Recap: Strength vs. Stress Properties of snow Stress Strength factors Stress relief
Editor's Notes
#2: NOTE TO PRESENTER Copyright 息2000-2002 , Howard M. Laney. All rights reserved. Use of this material constitutes agreement with the following terms and conditions. This material is licensed for use by National Ski Patrol, Inc. (NSP) certified instructors, for NSP registered Avalanche courses only. The intent of the copyright is to maintain quality control over the product. Periodic upgrades to this presentation will be made available to qualified users, through NSP distribution channels. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - We have listed avalanche factors separately, but be aware that they are all acting simultaneously and interactively. Paradoxically, each factor may contribute either to stability or to instability, depending on what other factors are at play in any given situation. Sound interesting?
#4: What is missing from the diagram? Should people be included as factors that produce avalanches?
#5: To understand how this works, you need to know something about the characteristics of snow.
#6: Gravity and temperature are constantly manipulating the snow pack. Stress occurs in three basic forms. All three stresses are active simultaneously in the snow pack. All three must cause brittle failure in the snow pack to produce an avalanche. How does gravity cause stress? How does temperature cause stress?
#7: Difficult to clearly state which factors contribute to stability or instability. It can go either way, depending on its interaction with other factors.
#9: Note the thick snow deposits at a lower elevation than the obvious snow line on the right half of the picture.
#10: Knobs produce a triple threat for overloading.
#11: What do 1-3 indicate? solar radiation striking the snow surface Penetration of light into the snow pack (small amount) Most light reflected back into the atmosphere What does 4-6 indicate? 4. Heat is radiated from the snow into the atmosphere. 5. Some penetrates the atmospheric layers 6. Most is reflected back toward the surface What does 7-9 indicate? 7. Heat energy may strike a cloud 8. Some heat is reflected back to the surface 9. Most works its way into the upper atmosphere (becoming 4) What can this tell us about changes in the snow pack on a clear or cloudy day? What can this tell us about changes in the snow pack on a clear or cloudy night?
#12: Remember that snow is visco-elastic. It can deform and move in response to force (stress). The whole snow pack is slowly flowing down hill (Glide). Newer, less consolidated snow can glide faster than older, consolidated, compressed snow, so the upper layers move at a faster rate than the lower layers (creep) Explain how this relieves some stresses, but increases others.
#13: Dig around an isolated rock or tree. Is the snow firmly bonded to it? Is the snow of the same structure and consistency as the rest of the adjacent snow pack? If not, why not? There is stress in contours, but it is most pronounced where the contour changes Why so? Rock interfaces consist of large outcroppings, cliff bands What happens there? Sun lines are where rock outcroppings, forest margins, or ridge lines create significant shading of a portion of a slope while the rest gets a dose of sun. How would this affect stress in the snow pack? How do pillows affect stress? Is the stress evenly or unevenly distributed? Slab margins are where the relatively thin areas of the snow pack. How does this contribute to stress? One might think that brush would serve as an excellent anchor point. Who has walked through the snow covering brush? Describe the experience. (constant falling through, large voids, etc. theyll get the point)
#14: Remember my earlier question regarding the shape of a slope? What is a possible effect of a weak layer here? What effect does the concavity have on compression? What effect does the convexity have on tension? Whats a snow cushion? What is its effect here? What effect does a rock or cliff band have on tension of snow beneath it?
#15: What are these? (glide cracks) Where else are they found? (downhill side of cliff bands, rock outcroppings, etc.) What do they indicate about slope stability? Indicate deformation of snow layers through movement downhill May indicate stress relief in the slab through deformation May indicate increase of tension stress in convex portions of the slab &/or loss of anchoring in tension zone May indicate increase in shear stress on underlying layers. May indicate location of isolated stress points within the slope.
#16: Anchors are large objects fixed to the ground that may block or inhibit the down hill motion of snow. Remember the avalanche you were asked to classify earlier? What did the trees seem to do?.
#17: Remember the previous slide on anchors? They are temporary at best.
#18: So, what causes a snow pack to avalanche? What causes Loose Snow releases?
#19: These avalanches are the result of a cascading effect, where one moving particle dislodges another particle, which then dislodge others, and so on.
#20: Snow sliding off steep upper slopes can overload and strain the stability of lower slopes. They may also provide move snow loads to areas with less slope, which releases loading stress and actually has a stabilizing effect. They might also trigger slab avalanches on already unstable lower slopes. . . .And that brings us to Slab Avalanches
#21: Guess what kind of snow has been known to avalanche on slopes of less than 20 degrees? Why? Demo Tip: Bring in a pan of wet slush. Scoop up a handful of slush and press it into a snowball, pressing out the water. It may hold together. Return the snowball to the pan & let it soak up some of the loose water. If it does not collapse on its own, lightly press on it with a thumb, it should collapse.
#23: To understand how this works, you need to know something about the characteristics of snow.
#24: The weight of the skier caused the weak layer to collapse, all but eliminating shear strength on the bed surface. Tensile strength is overloaded and fails. Shear strength along the flanks is all thats left to hold the slab in place not enough it, too, quickly fails. The slab is free to move. This is now considered the most common process.
#26: What are some characteristic properties of Snow? Viscous Elastic Resilient Dynamic (metamorphism) Stress What are the forms of stress? Which form is most important? What must stress do to initiate an avalanche Strength What factors tend to increase snow pack strength? What factors tend to decrease snow pack strength? Stress Relief What dynamics relieve stress in a snow pack? Compare viscous properties with elastic properties as they relate to avalanche potential.