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Another
Year (2006) of Damaging Landslides in Northern Utah
Location of 2006 landslides discussed in this article.
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by Richard Giraud and Francis Ashland
1.South Weber
2.Sunset & Beechwood
Drive, Layton
3.Creekside Drive,
Mountain Green
4.Sherwood Hills,
Provo
5.City Creek Canyon,
Salt Lake City
In 2006, a locally wet spring on the heels of a statewide wet year
in 2005 resulted in an active landslide season in northern Utah.
Nearly all of the 2006 landslides were reactivations of pre-existing
landslides, including slides that had previously moved sometime
during the past decade.
The following are some of the landslides UGS geologists investigated
to assist local governments with their emergency response.
1650 East Landslide, South Weber
Around 9:30 p.m. on Sunday, April 9, a rapidly moving landslide
in South Weber broke through the back wall of a house at 7687 South
1650 East, injuring a child inside.
Additional Reports:
04/09/06 Landslide
02/20/05 Landslide
2006 Technical
Report (pdf)
2005 Technical
Report (pdf)The landslide started on a steep slope near
a pond in a gravel pit atop a bluff behind the house. Subsequent
investigation found evidence of subsurface water flow from the pond
to the slope.
Water seepage and saturation of materials on the bluff top likely
triggered the landslide, but the steep slope, the weight of fill
placed on the top of the slope, and weak underlying geologic materials
were contributing factors.
The rapidly moving landslide that slammed into this house at 7687
South 1650 East, South Weber, broke through the back wall and injured
a child inside.
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Also, a major rain and snow storm on April 4 through 6 dropped
approximately 2 inches of water, likely causing surface and subsurface
water levels to rise. After the landslide, the pond was drained
to reduce further landsliding.
The 1650 East landslide and a nearby similar one that demolished
a barn and blocked South Weber Drive (State Route 60) in 2005, demonstrate
the destructive nature of rapidly moving landslides and the risk
of building at the base of steep slopes.
Sunset Drive and Beechwood Drive Landslides,
Layton
Additional Reports:
04/15/06 Landslide
1998 Technical Report,
p.28-35 (pdf)Homeowners along Sunset Drive in Layton recognized
in mid-April that the Sunset Drive landslide had reactivated. In
1998, landslide movement damaged seven lots and resulted in a house
having to be condemned and demolished. The 2006 movement affected
six lots, including two houses.
This house at 1843 East Sunset Drive straddles the main scarp of
the landslide. Landslide movement has removed support from beneath
part of the foundation.
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The house at 1843 East Sunset Drive straddles the main scarp, and
landslide movement has removed support from beneath part of the
foundation. Layton City building inspectors found the house unsafe
for occupancy due to structural damage, and it may be moved off
the landslide to another location.
UGS geologists measured a 4- to 8-foot increase in ground-water
levels in and near the landslide between March 16 and April 17,
which apparently triggered movement. The 2006 peak ground-water
level is a threshold that can be used to predict future landslide
movement.
Beechwood Drive landslide main scarp, cutting across backyards.
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The Beechwood Drive landslide is a quarter-mile south of the Sunset
Drive landslide and reactivated at about the same time. The Beechwood
Drive landslide is a reactivation of a pre-existing landslide with
no documented historical movement.
The landslide main scarp cuts across the back of five lots and
has damaged landscaping in backyards. The landslide also affected
the upper part of the proposed Beechwood subdivision phase 6 development.
Both the Sunset and Beechwood Drive landslides show how prone
some slopes in Layton are to landslide movement.
Creekside Drive Landslides, Mountain Green
Additional Reports:
2005-2006 Landslides
Technical Report
(pdf)In 2005, three landslides formed in the Creekside Drive
area of Mountain Green in Morgan County, in a northeast-facing slope
underlain by pre-existing landslide deposits. In 2006, the three
landslides reactivated, and two new landslides formed nearby.
Landslide movement left this concrete driveway slab suspended in
the air in the Creekside Drive area, Mountain Green.
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Continued movement of the largest of the five landslides forced
the evacuation of a severely damaged house at the top of the slide,
and damaged two others.
Damage also occurred to Creekside Drive and utilities beneath
the road, disrupting the power and water to the affected subdivision.
Despite favorable subdivision-wide and lot-specific geotechnical
studies, landsliding occurred within only a few years of development
on the pre-existing landslide deposits. Stabilization of the landslides,
particularly the largest one, will likely prove costly and technically
challenging.
Sherwood Hills Landslide, Provo
Damage to road in upper part of Sherwood Hills landslide, Provo.
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The Sherwood Hills landslide in northern Provo is one of several
in northern Utah that has undergone repeated movement over the past
25 years. Damage to houses and roads caused by renewed landslide
movement was first documented in the early 1980s.
The landslide has been systematically monitored since May 1999
when Provo City established survey points on the slide and began
using high-precision Global Positioning System survey techniques
to measure movement. The survey results suggest that the landslide
remained active even during the drought years between 1999 and 2004.
With the return of wetter-than-normal conditions in 2005, the
rate and area of landslide movement increased. By 2006, three houses
in the upper part of the landslide had been abandoned, including
one built in 2000, and a road had been severely damaged.
Some data suggest that landslide movement is continuous, slowing
in the summer to an undetectable rate, and increasing in the late
winter and early spring as groundwater levels rise during the snowmelt.
The continuing losses due to movement illustrate the potential
high costs, both public and private, associated with development
on large pre-existing landslides.
City Creek Canyon Landslides, Salt Lake City
Additional Report:
04/06/04 LandslideA cluster
of historical landslides is visible from the hairpin turn in Bonneville
Boulevard in lower City Creek Canyon in Salt Lake City. Movement
of the largest and most damaging of these landslides has been monitored
since June 1998 by the UGS and the Salt Lake City surveyor.
Offset on main scarp by repeated landslide movement, City Creek
Canyon, Salt Lake City. Concrete covers the main scarp that formed
between 1999 and 2004. Fresh soil is exposed below due to continued
offset in 2005 and 2006.
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Since June 1998, the toe of the landslide has moved about 24 feet,
and the main scarp has offset the ground surface about the same
amount.
Like most recurrently active landslides in northern Utah, movement
typically occurs between March and June as ground-water levels rise
following the snowmelt.
Four houses at the top of the slide are threatened, and efforts
to protect one house have cost in excess of $300,000. In 2006 the
landslide reactivated again, moving about 2 feet, despite drier-than-normal
conditions in Salt Lake City.
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