Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




ICE WORLD
5.5-mile-long landslide spotted in Alaska
by Staff Writers
Anchorage, Alaska (UPI) Jul 14, 2012


A massive landslide has covered about 5 1/2 miles of Johns Hopkins Glacier in Glacier Bay National Park in Alaska, park officials say.

The National Parks Traveler Web site said a huge chunk of the slope of 11,750-foot high Lituya Mountain sloughed off June 11 and cascaded into the valley below. It slid down with such force it registered as a small earthquake.

"This thing is huge. It's 9 kilometers long, so 5.5 miles long," Marten Geertsema, a research geomorphologist for the provincial Forest Service in British Columbia, told the Traveler Tuesday. "On the Canadian side it triggered a 3.7-magnitude earthquake. The [U.S. Geological Survey] recorded it at 3.4. That's quite large for a seismic signal [from a landslide].

"... If someone was trekking up this glacier when it happened, they would have been toast."

The cause of the slide, which was first photographed July 2 by an air taxi pilot, Drake Olson, hasn't been determined.

Geertsema said a breakdown in the permafrost on the mountain could be to blame.

"With permafrost degradation there's a whole complex suite of fractures that develop," he said. "Some of them dilate, so they open and close, but some of them are permanent. And over time it progressively weakens, the rock mass. It could have been just ready to go. It's hard to know what the factors are."

He called it biggest slide he's seen in North America, though he said one in Russia covered 20 miles.

Geertsema said it's not known whether global warming played a role in the landslide.

.


Related Links
Beyond the Ice Age






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








ICE WORLD
Study: Wrong diet doomed 1912 polar try
London (UPI) Jun 29, 2012
Members of an ill-fated British expedition to the South Pole in 1912 were effectively killed by the equivalent of a modern slimming diet, research has shown. Capt. Robert Falcon Scott's disastrous attempt to be the first to the South Pole resulted in his death and the death of four comrades. British researchers say the men expended more energy than Olympic athletes as they hauled ... read more


ICE WORLD
SpaceX Completes Design Review of Dragon

Arianespace to launch Taranis satellite for CNES

SpaceX Dragon Utilizes Cooper Interconnect Non-Explosive Actuators

ILS Proton Launches SES-5 For SES

ICE WORLD
NASA Mars images 'next best thing to being there'

Life's molecules could lie within reach of Mars Curiosity rover

Final Six-Member Crew Selected for Mars Food Mission

Opportunity Celebratres 3,000 Martian Days of Operation on the Surface of Mars!

ICE WORLD
ESA to catch laser beam from Moon mission

Researchers Estimate Ice Content of Crater at Moon's South Pole

Researchers find evidence of ice content at the moon's south pole

Nanoparticles found in moon glass bubbles explain weird lunar soil behaviour

ICE WORLD
Hubble Discovers a Fifth Moon Orbiting Pluto

Hubble telescope spots fifth moon near Pluto

New Horizons Doing Science in Its Sleep

It's a Sim: Out in Deep Space, New Horizons Practices the 2015 Pluto Encounter

ICE WORLD
Can Astronomers Detect Exoplanet Oceans

The Mysterious Case of the Disappearing Dust

Study in Nature sheds new light on planet formation

New Instrument Sifts Through Starlight to Reveal New Worlds

ICE WORLD
Cella Energy Signs Fuel Source Deal with Kennedy Space Center

HI-C Sounding Rocket Mission Has Finest Mirrors Ever Made

XCOR Aerospace And Midland Development Corp Announce New Commercial Spaceflight Research Center

Rocketdyne Completes CCDev 2 Hot Fire Testing on Thruster for NASA Commercial Crew Program

ICE WORLD
Shenzhou mission sparks 'science fever'

China Beats Russia on Space Launches

China open to cooperation

China set to launch bigger space program

ICE WORLD
Planetary Resources Announces Agreement with Virgin Galactic for Payload Services

Explained: Near-miss asteroids

The B612 Foundation Announces The First Privately Funded Deep Space Mission

Ex-NASA astronauts aim to launch asteroid tracker




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement