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Study:
La Conchita Slide Part of Much Larger Landslide
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The deadly La Conchita landslide
last January is a small part of a much larger slide, geological
research reveals. |
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By Gail
Gallessich
The deadly
landslide that killed 10 people and destroyed approximately 30 homes
in La Conchita last January is but a tiny part of a much larger
slide, called the Rincon Mountain slide, discovered by Larry D.
Gurrola, geologist and a UCSB graduate student. The slide started
many thousands of years ago and will continue generating slides
in the future, Gurrola recently told a national meeting of the Geological
Society of America in Salt Lake City.
Prehistoric slides present at Rincon Mountain cover
an area of about 1,300 acres with a minimum volume of about 600
million cubic yards, said Edward A. Keller, professor of earth science
and Gurrola’s Ph.D. adviser. Keller analyzed the landslide complex
with Gurrola and Tim Tierney, UCSB research scientist. Geological
consultant Ted Powers also contributed.
The La Conchita landslides that occurred in 1995
and 2005 form only a small percent of a much larger landslide complex,
according to the geologists. These recent landslides spilled over
U.S. Highway 101 next to the Ventura County community located 25
miles south of Santa Barbara.
“The slope that failed in 1995 and 2005 is a Holocene
Epoch paleosea cliff, and is near the seaward edge of an ancient
landslide that has produced prehistoric and historic slides, slumps,
debris, and mud flows,” said Gurrola. “The question is not if but
when the next landslide will impact the community of La Conchita.
A combination of factors makes future landslides inevitable. These
are: active faulting and folding; rapid tectonic uplift; very weak
rocks; steep topography; and the presence of springs.”
Keller and Gurrola explained that the triggering
mechanism for debris flows and mudflows appears to be prolonged,
intense precipitation. The larger, complex slides may increase in
activity months or even years after wet years and infiltration of
rainwater to the subsurface environment. An earthquake could also
trigger a slide.
“Landslides similar or larger than the 1995 and
2005 events may occur next year or in coming decades, during or
shortly after intense rain,” said Gurrola. “If people continue to
live in La Conchita, more lives will be lost in the future, and
this is unacceptable.”
Keller and Gurrola urged that property owners be
fairly compensated for their property, and proposed that the site
of La Conchita be made into a beach park. “For this to happen will
take a significant community fund-raising effort with assistance
at local, state, and national levels, in cooperation with organizations
such as the Land Trust Alliance,” said Keller.
He mentioned that a warning system of sensors to
detect slope movement was installed in the slope following the slide
of 1995. “However, the 2005 slide evidently started above these
sensors or the slide was too fast for a warning,” said Keller.
“In hindsight, notice of the duration and intensity
of rainfall might have been helpful in providing a warning, but
additional research would be necessary to test this hypothesis.
A combination of instruments to detect movement with assessment
of rainfall might be the best approach.”
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