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Current Results of Landslide Hazard Mapping in Western North Carolina August 1, 2007 Ken Gillon – Rick Wooten – Rebecca Latham – Anne Witt Tommy Douglas – Stephen Fuemmeler – Jennifer Bauer John Nickerson

Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

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Page 1: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Current Results of Landslide Hazard Mapping in Western

North Carolina August 1, 2007

Ken Gillon – Rick Wooten – Rebecca Latham – Anne Witt Tommy Douglas – Stephen Fuemmeler – Jennifer Bauer

John Nickerson

Page 2: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

ModifiedSlopes

• 1 Fatality• 28 Structures Destroyed - Condemned

N.C. Landslides1990 - 2006• 6 Fatalities

• 45 Structures Destroyed - CondemnedTotal

Page 3: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Recurring Weather Patterns

*

*Rainfall increases with elevation

Page 4: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Peeks Creek Landslide – Sept. 16-18, 2004

Page 5: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Rock Slides (Blue Ridge Parkway; December 2004 reactivation)

Page 6: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Broad River FD - Buncombe County - TS Cindy

Page 7: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

LiDAR Hillshade DEM

----- Active Rotational Debris Slide

----- Past-Active Debris Deposit

Scarp

Scarp Transverse Depression

Page 8: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

• 1.5 acres

• 50 feet deep

• 64,600 cubic yards

• 4 homes severely damaged

• 4 homes endangered

Landslides

in

Weathered

Rock

11/28/2005

Page 9: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

N.C. Slope Movement – Slope Movement Deposit Database 2,046 4,550 Entries

Raleigh

Data and analysis for policy decisions

http://www.nconemap.com/

Page 10: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Soil Sampling, Testing, and

Analysis

Page 11: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina
Page 12: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Macon County

All 33 Frances-Ivan debris flows

occurred in areas of past debris flow

activity14C 23,260

14C 370 - 390

Page 13: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

20 ft - 6m LiDAR DEM Hillshade

Slow-Moving Weathered Rock

Slides

GPS MappingDebris flow tracks – debris deposits

Page 14: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

• Slope Movements / Deposits – where landslides occurredSlow Moving Landslides – where landslides are occurring

• Stability INdex Map (SINMAP) Results - where debris flows-slides might start

• Downslope Hazards – where debris flows-slides might go

• Bedrock Geology – mapped problematic rock units

Data and Mapping ProductsIn GIS

Page 15: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

The Products: 1) Where Landslides Have Occurred - or Are Occurring

Macon County - 520 mi2 or 1347 km2

Page 16: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

2) Where Debris Flows and Debris Slides are Likely to StartStability INdex MAp

SINMAP – Pack, Tarboton & Goodwin, 1998

• 5 in / 24-hr 125 mm / 24hr rainfall event

• 11% of county classified as “high hazard” (FS < 1)

Page 17: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

• 59 naturally occurring debris flows/slides used for calibration

Page 18: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

3) Downslope Hazard Map: Where Debris Flows May Go

Private Lands

16%

2%

82%

Moderate

HighLow

Private Land

Public Lands

33%

3%

64%

High

Moderate

Low

Public Land

Page 19: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Downslope HazardsNickajack Creek

Page 20: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Types of Slope Movements in Macon County

10% 4%

32%

5%28%

5%

2% 8% 2% 4%

CompositeRock FallDebris FlowEarth FlowDebris SlideEarth SlideRock SlideWeathered Rock SlideOtherUnknown

n= 165Debris-Earth Slides and Flows = 70%

56%On Modified

Slopes

40%On Unmodified

Slopes

4% Unknown

Types of landslides in Macon County

• 171 Modern Landslides

• 3% of county covered by pre-existing debris deposits

• Landslides are more likely to occur on modified slopes

Results of Landslide Mapping of Macon County

Page 21: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

1940 2005

• 139 new structures currently reside on 1940 landslide tracks

• 521 landslide tracks cross roads visible on 2005 orthophotos

Watauga County Landslide Hazard Mapping

Some Initial Statistics: Over 2000 1940 Landslides Occurred

Page 22: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Max. Rainfall Rate vs. Time

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

0 2 4 6 8 10

Hours

Rai

nfal

l In

ches

/Hr

Inches

Camille 1969

Deep Gap 1940

Ivan 2004

Nelson County, VA

Macon County, NC

Allegheny County, NC

Maximum Rainfall Rate vs. Duration

Page 23: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina
Page 24: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

15 1940 tracks reactivated in 2004

Page 25: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina
Page 26: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Preliminary

Stability Index Map

DRAFTWork in Progress

Not for Distribution

Asheville

Buncombe County:Landslide Hazard Mapping In Progress

Page 27: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

How Can The Maps Be Used?

• Inform public and local governments of potential problem areas - disclosure

• Maps and data - planning tools

• Trigger for more detailed studies

• Emergency Management - Areas of concern when weather conditions favor landslides – landslide advisories

• Landslide point locations on-line at www.nconemap

Page 28: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

• Significant landslide hazard in western North Carolina

• Recurring weather patterns: - Major regional event 22-29 yrs - Landslide event in region 9 yrs

• Increasing development on steep slopes increases exposure to landslide hazards

• Increased risk: - destabilizing affects of human activity - development in downslope hazard areas

• GIS landslide hazard maps and outreach help mitigate hazard

• Map 2-3 counties per year

• Critical: - LiDAR and remote imagery (new and archival)- Geologic and soil survey maps

• Maps not a substitute for site specific investigations

Summary and Conclusions

Page 29: Current Results of Landslides Hazard Mapping in Western Carolina

Rick Wooten, P.G.

Senior Geologist for Geohazards and Engineering Geology

North Carolina Geological Survey

828-296-4500

[email protected]

www.geology.enr.state.nc.us

“Landslide Information”

AcknowledgmentsUSFS – USGS – NCDOT – NWS – NPS

EM & FEMA Local & State AgenciesJMU – ASU – UNC-CH

Questions ??