Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6431626 Geomorphology 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•An age of 1980 ± 30 YBP is established for the giant Luanshibao landslide in China.•The high-density resistivity method was used to estimate landslide depth and volume.•A new empirical length-volume scaling for long-runout landslides was compiled.•The runout for the LSB landslide closely fit the length-volume scaling relationship.

In the Tibetan Plateau, active tectonic deformation triggers frequent earthquakes, and giant landslides associated with active faults produce serious consequences. A study of the characteristics and mechanism of a historical long-runout landslide in Luanshibao (LSB), Tibetan Plateau, China, finds a maximum sliding distance (L) of 3.83 km with an elevation drop (H) of 820 m. The landslide volume (V) was ~ 0.64-0.94 × 108 m3, and it produced a long-runout (H/L = 0.21). Recent surface offset along the sinistral strike-slip Litang-Dewu fault passes through the middle part of the landslide, which initiated on the hanging wall of the fault. Geological mapping, geophysical prospecting, trenching, and 14C dating together indicate that the LSB landslide occurred in jointed granite ca. 1980 ± 30 YBP, probably triggered by a large earthquake. Compilation of volume and runout distance data for this landslide and other previously published data for volcanic and nonvolcanic long-runout landslides yields a composite runout length-volume relation (L = 12.52V0.37) that closely predicts runout of the LSB landslide, although substantial variation is noted in runout length around the central tendency.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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