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Peter Lyttle: Almost every citizen in the United States could potentially experience
a landslide.
Types of Landslides
Peter Lyttle: Landslides come in quite a few different flavors, and even with our small
group of 20 here at the USGS, we have some of the world experts in each of the different
kinds of landslides. There are very slow-moving, deep-seated landslides, which don’t threaten
lives too often, but they can do a huge amount of damage to property. If you imagine your
house slowly moving down a hill. We have very fast moving landslides, which are a danger
to human beings. These are called debris flows. These move at 30 miles an hour, and if you
imagine sort of a consistency of concrete with huge boulders in it rushing at you at
30 miles an hour, you’re not going to get out of the way. These kill a few people around
the world every year. And finally there are rock falls, which probably are the kind of
landslide that most people are familiar with, when huge boulders fall off of a cliff along
the side of a highway and smash a car.
USGS Science
Sue Cannon: Within the Landslides Hazards Program we have three specific tasks. One
is developing tools and methodologies that can be used to characterize landslide hazards.
The second is to respond to landslide disasters, to provide expertise and assessments. And
then the third is outreach to try to educate the public about landslides and landslide
hazards as best we can.
Did You See It?
David Applegate: The Landslide Program is looking at an application called, “Did You
See It?,” in which members of the public can come to our website and give descriptions
of the landslide and the characteristics of it. They hopefully will even be able to post
photographs of it and we’ll start to build a database that will be very useful to us
scientifically.
Peter Lyttle: Hundreds of thousands of landslides occur in the United States every year, of
every imaginable scale. We would like to ultimately someday have an inventory of all of those
landslides.
Debris Flow Early Warning System
David Applegate: In the area of landslides, we’ve been working with partners in the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s National Weather Service on a Debris Flow
Early Warning System.
Pedro Restrepo: I’m really proud of how this joint collaboration between NOAA and
the USGS has resulted in a warning system that is helping the people in the communities
that are susceptible to debris flows, like in southern California, to be safer and to
be more resilient.
Sue Cannon: Within this warning system, the Weather Service takes the role of issuing
the forecasts and measuring what sort of rainfall is occurring. And then they have the system
for disseminating watches and warnings. The USGS brings to the table our knowledge about
what sort of rainfall conditions will lead to the landslides and what areas would be
the most susceptible.
Pedro Restrepo: The Debris Flow Warning System involves the National Weather Service to use
models developed by the U.S. Geological Survey, and in combination with our own observations
using high-resolution radar and weather forecasts, to tell the community and emergency managers
what are the areas that are at imminent risk of having a debris flow, which is a mudslide
or mudflow as they are commonly known.
Tips for Homeowners
Peter Lyttle: A number of USGS scientists produced a book in association with the American
Planning Association just a few years ago. This takes you step-by-step through some very
simple procedures that you can do to make your family safer and your community safer.
A National Hazard
Peter Lyttle: This is truly a national problem. It’s a problem that’s affecting our economy.
It’s causing billions of dollars in damage every year. And like many other natural hazards,
they actually do endanger people’s lives occasionally, and we need to sit up and pay
attention.
Sue Cannon: The Landslide Program has a website where we provide information about our research
or our ongoing projects, and that is landslides.usgs.gov.
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