Latest comment: 16 March 200617 comments8 people in discussion
66.167.136.87 21:36, 13 Jan 2005 (UTC): a good case could be made for merging the minimal detail from mudslide here and turning mudslide into a redirect.
I am not sure about this, but maybe "ice floes" should be ice flows. I've never heard of a floe. Also, this should be merged with mudslide. 128.101.70.24616:11, 31 October 2005 (UTC)lotusduckReply
Floe looks ok to me (from Australia, so probably a regional thing) and dictionary.com agrees.
I think it should be merged.
Since they both are sudden movements of roks down a hill and cause heavy damage.
AFAIK, technically, there is no such thing as a mudslide or a landslide, there are mudflows and rockslides both of which are different and deserve there own page. Mud only flows and a lanslide is a rockslide. I think that only the technical terms should be used and the colloquial terms shoud be redirects. I'm not sure where lahars fit in though. See mass wasting for more info. --Mdhowe04:37, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
A "landslide" is a type of mass wasting, and a landslide is technically a rock slide. A mudslide is a mudflow (I've already fixed this), and is not closely related to a rock slide. If anything, this page should redirect to rock slide and rewritten as it has very little factual information in it. Did that confuse you, cause it confused the hell out of me. --Mdhowe06:16, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
From the article it seems regolith is crushed rock. I'd say many landslides are soil/mud based. So landslide must be the parent of mass wasting.--Commander Keane11:52, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
The wiki is wrong, regolith is all layers of rock, sediments and soil material covering the surface of a planet and landslides are definitely a type of mass wasting, not the other way around. It is quite obvious that you haven't studied geology so I won't bother discussing this with you anymore, I will just go ahead and fix the errors. --Mdhowe14:07, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
I studied one semester of geology, with a civil engineering emphasis. So no, I don't know what regolith is, I was just using the wiki article. Having said that, there's no reason why some practical (ie: non-geological) information can't be included in the articles. I know how to relieve soil that's about to become a landslide, and I didn't need to know what a regolith is to know that. Wikipedia is for people generally, not just geologists. Finally, I think the main reason why I kept up participation in this discussion to see how many leading bullets points I could rack up.--Commander Keane16:09, 4 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Mudslide is a type (subset) of landslide. A mudslide moves by flowage of unconsolidated soil. A block glide type of landslide moves by failure of soil or rock along a discrete failure plane (slide plane). A block glide may be a rotational failure (failing on a arcuate slide plane) or a translational failure (non-rotational failure) that fails along a planar surface. 11-19-05. By an engineering geologist.
If mudslide is redirected to landslide, then so too should all other geomorphological processes under the banner of landslide. That's probably a good thing, because juxtaposition is a powerful illustrative tool, and the processes are pretty much the same. However, it should be done mindful of the fact that mudslides and landslides are not synonymous. The rheology of mudslides is quite particular - mud. Not all regolith is mud, or capable of forming mud, but the term landslide does refer to regolith in general. I should also add that landslides are not all rock slides. The landslides so frequent in California involve rock and soil. Daniel Collins04:54, 26 November 2005 (UTC)Reply
Two articles are better. In theory there are a few common aspects, but neither in rheology, reasons and material, nor in practice. Additionally one should look at the "handling" differences e.g. in warning, surveying or protection, for appropriate monitoring etc. In the Alps also geomorphology is extremely different between a "classical" Landslide and very quick mudflows. Therefore we have to distinguish strictly between several geodynamic processes and phenomena. By the way: does anybody know the english word for the german/austrian "Plaike", an usual phenomenon at grassy alpine slopes? --Geof22:12, 15 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
Since this is a lively, ongoing chat, here's some meat, from Hillslope Materials and Processes, Selby, 1993. Landslides are types of mass wasting that have a distinct plane or zone of sliding. This exlucdes falls, topples, creep, and flows. (This contrasts with what I previously wrote.) Et voila! No merge. Daniel Collins23:42, 15 March 2006 (UTC).Reply
Mmm, it seems the consensus is for no merge. I tend to agree with that. My argument was rather flawed, basing it on incorrect WP info, sorry about that. I'll removed the merge tags, so the discussion is complete.--Commander Keane01:49, 16 March 2006 (UTC)Reply
Picture location
Latest comment: 16 April 20061 comment1 person in discussion
Latest comment: 29 August 20172 comments2 people in discussion
The term Landslide is a general term for a perceptable movement of material down a slope. It is a type of Mass Wasting. There are lots of different types:
Scree, anybody? I have searched the entire page and no mention of the word scree. In any case, there are published classifications of mass movements and Wikipedia should try to stick to those, IMO. Basically a distinction has to be made in block movements on the one hand, and screes and flows on the other. Screes are particle supported while flows are liquid supported. A landslide is a slide, that is a block movement over a failure plane (which can have different shapes). The generic term is mass movement, not landslide. Then, let us not forget mass movements under water, sub-marine slides, sub-marine screes, and - no, not sub-marine flow, but turbidity current. This is a whole science. (Incidentally, it is called geomorphology or geology, depending on your POV.) --Lindorm21:50, 19 July 2006 (UTC)Reply
The current lists of landslides are getting out of hand. Most of the 20th century and 21st century ones are unsupported by any sources. Ideally we should end up with no lists here at all, they should have their own articles. This is what happened with the various earthquake lists in the earthquake article as the lists dominated the page. When transferred to lists, sources will be needed (as they should be here). It would be quite reasonable, if a little harsh, to remove all unsourced landslides from the article as it stands. Better probably to allow these to stay for now as the basis for separate list articles. Mikenorton (talk) 14:30, 22 September 2009 (UTC)Reply
Based on the overwhelming and immediate level of support for this proposal (sarcasm warning), I've gone ahead and created a List of landslides article. It contains all of those from before the 20th century and I've made a start on more recent ones. I will be adding those from the current article that have sources or their own articles. Finding sources for all those with a 'citation needed' tag is a major task that I will probably spend some time on but how far I get depends on how much time and energy I have, but if anyone else wants to lend a hand..... Mikenorton (talk) 16:06, 10 July 2010 (UTC)Reply
Further to my entry at 13:42, 17 September 2010 (UTC), I have received information, not yet confirmed, that the landslide occurred on Feb. 16, 2010 in Madeira, Italy with 32 people lost. For sensationalized coverage of a number of landslides, a Mike Norton might consider reviewing a collection of landslide videos at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R__3DYQCVnAPaul Niquette (talk) 17:40, 17 September 2010 (UTC)Reply
I've made a start at checking the mass of uncited landslides - if I find a source then I add them to the list of landslides, if not, they go. Mikenorton (talk) 23:14, 16 July 2010 (UTC)Reply
Useful website with many photos and videos
Latest comment: 22 March 20103 comments3 people in discussion
I have linked to the blog written by Professor David Petley, who is the Wilson Professor, Department of Geography, Durham University, England [1]. Durham is one of the top UK universities [2], and Prof Petley an academic with a long history in the field, so the source is completely reliable. I'm not sure what the rule is on blogs - if it was published as his own website rather than a blog I'm sure there wouldn't be a problem with including it in the external links. Anyhow, enjoy! It has lots of links to PDFs of articles etc. 86.147.162.38 (talk) 13:51, 16 February 2010 (UTC)Reply
Latest comment: 2 December 20171 comment1 person in discussion
Hello fellow Wikipedians,
I have just modified 3 external links on Landslide. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
Latest comment: 7 March 20191 comment1 person in discussion
"The term landslide or, less frequently, landslip,[1] refers to"
Should there be a comma after "landslip"? Or before "or"?--Adûnâi (talk) 04:04, 7 March 2019 (UTC)Reply
Cleaning up major ambiguities
Landslide classifications are all over the place in the scientific literature, and this article as it was reflected that. I've made some pervasive changes (though still not really enough) to make the ambiguities clearer, and to be more explicit about the actually robust Varnes-Hungr scheme. I've also propagated these changes over to landslide classification, which is also a disaster zone. DanHobley (talk)
As far as gravity phenomena classification on Mars planet is not a hot topic (not a troll, but sorry, I don't understand the problem that came to the article semi-protection…), the last image in the present article is captioned as "landslide". But in its commons title &caption it is named "avalanche", following the title of the original NASA article. I don't know the english geologists positions in the current debate, but as a (french) geologist and exo-geologist, I use to make a little difference between avalanche and landslide ; the left part of the picture, which shows the upper layers of the scopulus/cliff, does not show any deep scar ("niche d'arrachement" in french), but a surficial one, visibly only involving the upper layer, therefore the name choice. Best regards. -- Eric.LEWIN (d), 2020-11-19, 23:47 CET. — Preceding undated comment added 22:48, 19 November 2020 (UTC)Reply
Wayanad Landslides
Latest comment: 26 August 20241 comment1 person in discussion
The Wayanad landslides were one of the landmark disasters in the Wayanad district of Kerala in 2024 many citizens of Kerala had lost their lives due to the harsh landslides. The Prime Minister, Narendra Modi investigated the destruction caused by it, and helped the injured, It was on of the harsh and brutal disasters that Kerala had faced in their history of calamities. We pray that Wayanad to come back 2001:1A10:10AD:B701:3D53:6221:11CA:645F (talk) 10:29, 26 August 2024 (UTC)Reply