Skip to main content

Home/ UWC Grade 6 2010-2011/ Group items tagged List

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Niharika R

List of tsuanmis - 0 views

  •  
    This website has a list of the tsunamis that have taken place since 1990.
Katie Day

Plate Tectonics - 2 views

  • The Earth's tectonic plates courtesy of the U.S. Geological Survey
  • Collission or convergent boundaries. Where plates collide. Plate edges may be either oceanic crust or continental crust. So when plates collide, we have only three possibilities: oceanic-oceanic, oceanic-continental, or continental-continental collisions. If oceanic crust collide with continental crust, the denser oceanic crust is subducted under the less dense continental crust (as at the Ring of Fire). If continental crust collide with continental crust they push each other up in a mountain range (like the Himalayas).
    • Katie Day
       
      Look at the list of all these plates... Is it complete for the whole earth?
  •  
    This looks good -- great maps. 
  •  
    I had a look at it this will be able to help me with how earthquakes can start tsunami. This is very helpful
Aidan C

Landslide - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • A landslide or landslip is a geological phenomenon which includes a wide range of ground movement, such as rock falls, deep failure of slopes and shallow debris flows, which can occur in offshore, coastal and onshore environments. Although the action of gravity is the primary driving force for a landslide to occur, there are other contributing factors affecting the original slope stability. Typically, pre-conditional factors build up specific sub-surface conditions that make the area/slope prone to failure, whereas the actual landslide often requires a trigger before being released.
Aidan C

Causes of landslides - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • The causes of landslides are usually related to instabilities in slopes. It is usually possible to identify one or more landslide causes and one landslide trigger. The difference between these two concepts is subtle but important. The landslide causes are the reasons that a landslide occurred in that location and at that time. Landslide causes are listed in the following table, and include geological factors, morphological factors, physical factors and factors associated with human activity. Causes may be considered to be factors that made the slope vulnerable to failure, that predispose the slope to becoming unstable. The trigger is the single event that finally initiated the landslide. Thus, causes combine to make a slope vulnerable to failure, and the trigger finally initiates the movement. Landslides can have many causes but can only have one trigger as shown in the next figure. Usually, it is relatively easy to determine the trigger after the landslide has occurred (although it is generally very difficult to determine the exact nature of landslide triggers ahead of a movement event). Occasionally, even after detailed investigations, no trigger can be determined - this was the case in the large Mount Cook landslide in New Zealand 1991. It is unclear as to whether the lack of a trigger in such cases is the result of some unknown process acting within the landslide, or whether there was in fact a trigger, but it cannot be determined. Perhaps this is because the trigger was in fact a slow but steady decrease in material strength associated with the weathering of the rock - at some point the material becomes so weak that failure must occur. Hence the trigger is the weathering process, but this is not detectable externally. In most cases we think of a trigger as an external stimulus that induces an immediate or near-immediate response in the slope, in this case in the form of the movement of the landslide. Generally this movement is induced either because the stresses in the slope are altered, perhaps by increasing shear stress or decreasing the effective normal stress, or by reducing the resistance to the movement perhaps by decreasing the shear strength of the materials within the landslide.
  •  
    Grade 6
1 - 7 of 7
Showing 20 items per page