Oeschinensee and Kandertal landslides

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The landslide scar of the more recent Oeschinensee collapse

The area of Oeschinen Lake and Kander river valley in Switzerland have been subject of multiple large landslides during the Holocene. Both the number and timing of landslides are disputed, but the most recent estimates state that the large Kander landslide occurred about 3,210 years ago and the smaller Oeschinen Lake landslide 2,300 years ago. Both may have been caused by earthquakes, and the latter landslide generated the Oeschinen Lake. More recent landslides have occurred, and unstable rock masses occur in the landslide area.

Large landslides that block entire valleys are a considerable hazard in mountainous regions, in particular when they form highly unstable dams on rivers; the breach of such a dam on the Dadu River in China in 1786 caused a flood that killed 100,000 people. On the other hand, such landslides can generate spectacular landscapes,[1] such as the glaciated terrain around Oeschinen Lake in Switzerland which has drawn tourists since 150 years and is now part of the Jungfrau-Aletsch protected area.[2] Climate variations can cause slope instabilities and with global warming scientific interest in large collapses of mountains has risen.[3] Giant landslides in the Alps are commonly related to the destabilizing effects of ice retreat at the end of the ice ages, but the landslides often occur millennia after the retreat of ice, suggesting that additional triggers such as climate variations[4] and earthquake activity - perhaps in turn caused by deglaciation - are necessary to actually cause collapses.[5]

Oeschinensee is situated in the Bernese Alps,[6] within a 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) long side valley of the Kandertal, and lies at about 1,578 metres (5,177 ft) elevation. It receives inflow from glaciers and springs, while its waters eventually seep through landslide debris although in the past (before a small dam was built) the lake periodically overflowed.[2] The mountains are largely formed by various formations of Mesozoic rocks, which are mostly limestones with marls and sandstones;[7] their layered structure and the weakness of the marl layers facilitates the development of landslides.[8] The seismically active Rawil depression is only about 20 kilometres (12 mi) southeast of the Kander area.[9]

Collapses

Research history

References

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