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Slump (geology)

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The slump that destroyed Thistle, Utah, by creating an earthen dam that flooded the area

A slump is of failure include joints or bedding planes, especially where a permeable layer overrides an impermeable surface. Block slumps are a type of translational slump in which one or more related block units move downslope as a relatively coherent mass.


Slumps have several characteristic features. The cut which forms as the landmass breaks away from the slope is called the scarp and is often cliff-like and concave. In rotational slumps, the main slump block often breaks into a series of secondary slumps and associated scarps to form stairstep pattern of displaced blocks.Cite error: A <ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).

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