• Landslides are the downslope movement of earth materials (rock, debris, and soil) at rates that range from inches per year to tens of miles per hour.
  • Many deal with landslides as part of flood control, erosion control, hillside management, earthquake hazard mitigation, road stabilization, and other programs.
  • With 88 % of the vote, the incumbent won by a landslide . ... The name comes from bar chart presentation, where the drawings resemble a landslide.
  • Lots of landslides are activated in a short period of time, due to extreme hydrological conditions in a relatively small area.
  • The result is wearing off of the earth’s surface. Landslide or landslip can happen underwater which results to submarine landslides.
  • Landslides occur in all environments and can be caused by natural processes like rain or earthquakes, or by human processes such as construction or mining.
  • Short-term stresses imposed by earthquakes and rainstorms can likewise contribute to the activation of landslides.
  • A landslide, sometimes known as landslip, slope failure or slump, is an uncontrollable downhill flow of rock, earth, debris or the combination of the three.
  • There are many ways to describe a landslide. The nature of a landslide's movement and the type of material involved are two of the most common.
  • The amount of material that falls in a landslide can be as small as the size of a refrigerator or as large as an entire mountainside.