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REPORT:
Sedimentology, Behavior, and Hazards of Debris Flows at Mount Rainier, Washington


-- Scott, K.M., Vallance, J.W., and Pringle, P.T., 1995,
Sedimentology, Behavior, and Hazards of Debris Flows at Mount Rainier, Washington: U.S. Geological Survey Professional Paper 1547, 56p.

Mount Rainier is potentially the most dangerous volcano in the Cascade Range because of its great height, frequent earthquakes, active hydrothermal system, and extensive glacier mantle. Many debris flows and their distal phases have inundated areas far from the volcano during postglacial time. Two types of debris flows, cohesive and noncohesive, have radically different origins and behavior that relates empirically to clay content. The two types are the major subpopulations of debris flows at Mount Rainier. The behavior of cohesive flows is affected by the cohesion and adhesion of particles; noncohesive flows are dominated by particle collisions to the extent that particle cataclasis becomes common during near-boundary shear. -- Scott, et.al, 1995




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02/02/06, Lyn Topinka