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Submarine landslides: processes, triggers and hazard prediction

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TLDR
Monitoring of critical areas where landslides might be imminent and modelling landslide consequences so that appropriate mitigation strategies can be developed would appear to be areas where advances on current practice are possible.
Abstract
Huge landslides, mobilizing hundreds to thousands of km3 of sediment and rock are ubiquitous in submarine settings ranging from the steepest volcanic island slopes to the gentlest muddy slopes of submarine deltas. Here, we summarize current knowledge of such landslides and the problems of assessing their hazard potential. The major hazards related to submarine landslides include destruction of seabed infrastructure, collapse of coastal areas into the sea and landslide-generated tsunamis. Most submarine slopes are inherently stable. Elevated pore pressures (leading to decreased frictional resistance to sliding) and specific weak layers within stratified sequences appear to be the key factors influencing landslide occurrence. Elevated pore pressures can result from normal depositional processes or from transient processes such as earthquake shaking; historical evidence suggests that the majority of large submarine landslides are triggered by earthquakes. Because of their tsunamigenic potential, ocean-island flank collapses and rockslides in fjords have been identified as the most dangerous of all landslide related hazards. Published models of ocean-island landslides mainly examine ‘worst-case scenarios’ that have a low probability of occurrence. Areas prone to submarine landsliding are relatively easy to identify, but we are still some way from being able to forecast individual events with precision. Monitoring of critical areas where landslides might be imminent and modelling landslide consequences so that appropriate mitigation strategies can be developed would appear to be areas where advances on current practice are possible.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Subaqueous sediment density flows: Depositional processes and deposit types

TL;DR: In this article, the authors summarized the processes by which density flows deposit sediment and proposed a new single classification for the resulting types of deposit, which is consistent with previous models of spatial decelerating (dissipative) dilute flow.
Journal Article

Classification of offshore mass movements

TL;DR: More than 100 offshore mass-movement deposits have been studied in Holocene and Pleistocene sediments, and the processes can be divided into three main types: slides/slumps, plastic flows, and turbidity currents, of which 13 main varieties have been recognized as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Onset of submarine debris flow deposition far from original giant landslide

TL;DR: This work provides evidence that submarine flows can produce giant debris flow deposits that start several hundred kilometres from the original landslide, encased within deposits of a more dilute flow type called turbidity current.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mélanges and mélange-forming processes: a historical overview and new concepts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a historical overview of the evolving melange concept and investigate the relationships between melange types and their tectonic settings of formation, investigating the contribution of mass-transport versus contractional deformation processes at the onset of melange formation and throughout the evolution of different melange type.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tsunami modelling with adaptively refined finite volume methods

TL;DR: These issues are discussed in the context of Riemann-solver-based finite volume methods for tsunami modelling in a ‘wellbalanced’ manner and also apply to a variety of other geophysical flows.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The physics of debris flows

TL;DR: In this paper, a simple model that satisfies most of these criteria uses depth-averaged equations of motion patterned after those of the Savage-Hutter theory for gravity-driven flow of dry granular masses but generalized to include the effects of viscous pore fluid with varying pressure.
Journal ArticleDOI

The physical character of subaqueous sedimentary density flows and their deposits

TL;DR: A simple classification of sedimentary density flows, based on physical flow properties and grain-support mechanisms, and briefly discusses the likely characteristics of the deposited sediments is presented in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prodigious submarine landslides on the Hawaiian Ridge

TL;DR: The extensive area covered by major submarine mass wasting deposits on or near the Hawaiian Ridge has been delimited by systematic mapping of the Hawaiian exclusive economic zone using the side-looking sonar system GLORIA as mentioned in this paper.
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