CGRG Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology
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Author : Guthrie, R.H.; and Evans, S.G.
Date : 2004.
Title : Magnitude and frequency of landslides triggered by a storm event, Loughborough Inlet, British Columbia.
Publication : Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Issue : 4:
Page(s) : 475-483.
Abstract
One hundred and one landslides were documented across 370km2 following arainstorm that swept the British Columbia coastline on 18 November 2001.Despite the regional nature of the storm, the landslides were spaced closetogether, even within the study area. Landslide clustering is attributed tohigh intensity storm cells too small to be recorded by the generalhydrometric network. The evidence nicely corroborates previous historicalstudies that reached similar conclusions, but against which there was nomodern analog analyzed for coastal British Columbia. Magnitude-cumulativefrequency data plotted well on a power law curve for landslides greater than10000m2, however, below that size several curves would fit. The rollovereffect, a point where the data is no longer represented by the power law,therefore occurs at about 1.5 orders of magnitude higher than the smallestlandslide. Additional work on Vancouver Island has provided evidence forrollovers at similar values. We propose that the rollover is a manifestationof the physical conditions of landslide occurrence and process uniformity.The data was fit to a double Pareto distribution and P-P plots weregenerated for several data sets to examine the fit of that model. The doublePareto model describes the bulk of the data well, however, less well at thetails. For small landslides (<650m2) this may still be a product ofcensoring. Landscape denudation from the storm was averaged over the studyarea and equal to 2mm of erosion. This is more than an order of magnitudelarger than the annual rate of denudation reported by other authors forcoastal British Columbia, but substantially less than New Zealand. Thenumber is somewhat affected by the rather arbitrary choice of a study areaboundary.
Bibliography of Canadian Geomorphology