Innovation Winter 2025/26
Landslide types - at a glance
Movement mechanism
Size & speed
Type
Material
Typical triggers Monitoring challenges
Rock, soil, debris, or artificial fill
Varies: rotational,
Wide range of sizes and speeds
Rainfall, seismic activity, human disturbance, vegetation loss
Mapping and classification complex; probabilistic risk models used; susceptible to climate change effects Difficult to predict due to randomness; often triggered by minor disturbances Subsurface conditions hard to assess; fracture mapping essential; real-time monitoring possible but costly
translational, flow, topple, or fall Free fall, bouncing, or rolling from steep slopes or cliffs
Landslide
Individual rock blocks
Freeze-thaw cycles, root growth, vibrations, erosion
Small volume, very fast
Rockfall
Large masses of fractured rock
Sliding along a failure surface, often controlled by fractures
Larger volume, moderate to fast
Combined factors (e.g., rainfall + fracture arrangement); require specific geometry for release
Rockslide
rockfalls: “to trigger something that’s millions of cubic metres, it takes more than just the random things that trigger rockfalls,” Whittall explained. Confounding things further is our changing climate. Glaciers retreating further as our climate warms can remove key supports to otherwise stable rock faces, sending them tumbling down mountainsides during thaws. More rain events can increase erosion and infiltration, while drought conditions can lead to fracture expansion, vegetation depletion, and root decay (which could be holding back a rock face), and make the area more susceptible to slides during sudden massive rainfalls. These, among other combined factors, turn the task of developing accurate rockslide predictions into a quixotical quest. “It is truly a probabilistic thing,” Whittall said. “Because there’s a chain of events that are all That said, there are tools and systems to identify the probabilities, enabling engineers and geoscientists to take mitigating action to reduce the risk to human life and property. The first step to determining the potential for a given rockslide to occur is to look at historical data tracked in inventory maps. These records identify locations of previous landslide events. They may include the event’s extent (how far it slid), classification (rockslide, landslide, avalanche, or another event type), volume probabilistic that come together.” Mapping out the problems
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Innovation Winter 2025/26
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