geophysical mass flows
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nico Gray

<p>Geophysical mass flows often break down into large amplitude wave pulses and/or spontaneously form channels with static levees in the arrest zone, enhancing overall run-out. This talk reviews recent depth-averaged models that are able to capture the formation of:- (i) rollwaves, (ii) erosion-deposition waves (which exchange mass with an erodible substrate) and (iii) channel and levee formation, within a single framework. The key is the inclusion of frictional hysteresis, which allows static and moving zones to coexist, as well as depth-averaged viscous terms that incorporate further details of the granular rheology. As well as being able to compute time-dependent spatially evolving solutions numerically, the resulting model allows steady-state solutions to be constructed for the height, width and depth-averaged velocity profile across a leveed channel, which are in good quantitative agreement with small scale analogue experiments using monodisperse dry sand. Colour change experiments are used to show that erosion-deposition waves really do propagate downslope as a wave, rather than a coherent body of grains, and that the presence of the erodible substrate gives them surprising mobility over very long distances. Photos and videos of the similar effects at field scale will be shown to emphasize the importance of these ideas for a wide range of geophysical mass flows. There are, however, still many open challenges in how to generalize these results to multiphase mixtures with broad grain size distributions.</p>


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Mergili ◽  
Matthias Benedikt ◽  
Julia Krenn ◽  
Jan-Thomas Fischer ◽  
Shiva P Pudasaini

We present two GIS model applications for simulating the propagation of rapid geophysical mass flows: r.avaflow employs an advanced physically-based two phase flow model intended for in-detail case studies, r.randomwalk a conceptual model suitable for studies at various scales. Both tools are implemented in open source software environments serving for the needs of both research and practice. They offer a range of visualization, validation, parameter sensitivity analysis and parameter optimization functions. Some of the key functionalities of both tools are demonstrated for the Acheron rock avalanche in New Zealand.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Mergili ◽  
Matthias Benedikt ◽  
Julia Krenn ◽  
Jan-Thomas Fischer ◽  
Shiva P Pudasaini

We present two GIS model applications for simulating the propagation of rapid geophysical mass flows: r.avaflow employs an advanced physically-based two phase flow model intended for in-detail case studies, r.randomwalk a conceptual model suitable for studies at various scales. Both tools are implemented in open source software environments serving for the needs of both research and practice. They offer a range of visualization, validation, parameter sensitivity analysis and parameter optimization functions. Some of the key functionalities of both tools are demonstrated for the Acheron rock avalanche in New Zealand.


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Mergili ◽  
Matthias Benedikt ◽  
Julia Krenn ◽  
Jan-Thomas Fischer ◽  
Shiva P Pudasaini

We present two GIS model applications for simulating the propagation of rapid geophysical mass flows: r.avaflow employs an advanced physically-based two phase flow model intended for in-detail case studies, r.randomwalk a conceptual model suitable for studies at various scales. Both tools are implemented in open source software environments serving for the needs of both research and practice. They offer a range of visualization, validation, parameter sensitivity analysis and parameter optimization functions. Some of the key functionalities of both tools are demonstrated for the Acheron rock avalanche in New Zealand.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (6) ◽  
pp. 3789-3822 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Córdoba ◽  
M. F. Sheridan ◽  
E. B. Pitman

Abstract. Debris flows, avalanches, landslides, and other geophysical mass flows can contain O(106–1010) m3 or more of material. These flows commonly consist of mixture of soil and rocks with a significant quantity of interstitial fluid. They can be tens of meters deep, and their runouts can extend many kilometers. The complicated rheology of such a mixture challenges every constitutive model that can reasonably be applied; the range of length and timescales involved in such mass flows challenges the computational capabilities of existing systems.This paper extends recent efforts to develop a depth averaged "thin layer" model for geophysical mass flows that contain a mixture of solid material and fluid. Concepts from the engineering community are integrated with phenomenological findings in geo-science, resulting in a theory that accounts for the principal solid and fluid forces as well as interactions between the phases, across a wide range of solid volume fraction. A principal contribution here is to present drag and phase interaction terms that comport with the literature in geo-sciences. The program predicts the evolution of the concentration and dynamic pressure. The theory is validated with with data from one dimensional dam break solutions and it is verified with data from artificial channel experiments.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 562-585
Author(s):  
Asif Mahmood ◽  
Robert L. Wolpert ◽  
E. Bruce Pitman

2012 ◽  
Vol 117 (F1) ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
C. G. Johnson ◽  
B. P. Kokelaar ◽  
R. M. Iverson ◽  
M. Logan ◽  
R. G. LaHusen ◽  
...  

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