Barry Arm landslide
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Location | Prince William Sound, Alaska, United States |
|---|---|
| Type | Landslide |

The Barry Arm landslide is an ongoing landslide in the Barry Arm fjord, northeast of Whittier, Alaska. The landslide is currently sliding into the waters of the fjord. Recently discovered in 2020, scientists fear that the slope may trigger a large tsunami when it falls into the fjord.[1]
The Barry Arm landslide measures about 650,000,000 cu yd (500,000,000 m3). It existed as far back as in the 1920s based on photographic evidence. From May 2010 to September 2013, during the retreat of Barry Glacier, the landslide moved at 85 ± 9 ft (25.9 ± 2.7 m) per year. The rate decreased to 4.25 ± 2.3 ft (1.30 ± 0.70 m) per year in March 2017 when the recession stopped.[2]
Satellite data and imagery indicate the large part of the landslide directly above the fjord waters began sliding on August 23, 2022. The slide is currently moving at a rate of 1.6–2.7 in (41–69 mm) each day. However, the volume of the landslide remains undetermined because the depth is uncertain. Similar movement were recorded since 2008 and 2020. However, the recent movement is at least twice as fast and occurring over a greater area.[2] The landslide consists of four parts (north to south: Tail, Core, Prow, Kite). In September 2022, movement was detected in large parts of "Core" and "Prow" as well as the entire "Kite" section.[3]