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Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK

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Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK. / Carling, P.A.; Jansen, J.D.; Su, T. et al.
In: Earth Surface Dynamics, Vol. 11, No. 4, 17.08.2023, p. 817-833.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Carling, PA, Jansen, JD, Su, T, Andersen, JL & Knudsen, MF 2023, 'Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK', Earth Surface Dynamics, vol. 11, no. 4, pp. 817-833. https://doi.org/10.5194/esurf-11-817-2023

APA

Carling, P. A., Jansen, J. D., Su, T., Andersen, J. L., & Knudsen, M. F. (2023). Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK. Earth Surface Dynamics, 11(4), 817-833. https://doi.org/10.5194/esurf-11-817-2023

Vancouver

Carling PA, Jansen JD, Su T, Andersen JL, Knudsen MF. Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK. Earth Surface Dynamics. 2023 Aug 17;11(4):817-833. doi: 10.5194/esurf-11-817-2023

Author

Carling, P.A. ; Jansen, J.D. ; Su, T. et al. / Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK. In: Earth Surface Dynamics. 2023 ; Vol. 11, No. 4. pp. 817-833.

Bibtex

@article{208d0eb19ddb46a483d49ab428adca94,
title = "Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK",
abstract = "Rock slope failures in the Lake District, UK, have been associated with deglacial processes after the Last Glacial Maximum, but the controls and timing of the failures remain poorly known. A cirque headwall failure was investigated to determine failure mechanisms and timing. The translated wedge of rock is thin and lies on a steep failure plane, yet the friable strata were not disrupted by downslope movement. Fault lines and a failure surface, defining the wedge, were used as input to a numerical model of rock wedge stability. Various failure scenarios indicated that the slope was unstable and would have failed catastrophically if not supported by glacial ice in the base of the cirque. The amount of ice required to buttress the slope is insubstantial, indicating likely failure during the thinning of the cirque glacier. We propose that, as the ice thinned, the wedge was lowered slowly down the cirque headwall, gradually exposing the failure plane. A cosmogenic 10Be surface exposure age of 18.0±1.2 ka from the outer surface of the wedge indicates Late Devensian de-icing of the backwall of the cirque, with a second exposure age from the upper portion of the failure plane yielding 12.0±0.8 ka. The 18.0±1.2 ka date is consistent with a small buttressing ice mass being present in the cirque at the time of regional deglaciation. The exposure age of 12.0±0.8 ka represents a minimum age, as the highly fractured surface of the failure plane has experienced post-failure mass-wasting. Considering the chronology, it appears unlikely that the cirque was reoccupied by a substantial ice mass during the Younger Dryas stadial.",
author = "P.A. Carling and J.D. Jansen and T. Su and J.L. Andersen and M.F. Knudsen",
year = "2023",
month = aug,
day = "17",
doi = "10.5194/esurf-11-817-2023",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "817--833",
journal = "Earth Surface Dynamics",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Ice-buttressing-controlled rock slope failure on a cirque headwall, Lake District, UK

AU - Carling, P.A.

AU - Jansen, J.D.

AU - Su, T.

AU - Andersen, J.L.

AU - Knudsen, M.F.

PY - 2023/8/17

Y1 - 2023/8/17

N2 - Rock slope failures in the Lake District, UK, have been associated with deglacial processes after the Last Glacial Maximum, but the controls and timing of the failures remain poorly known. A cirque headwall failure was investigated to determine failure mechanisms and timing. The translated wedge of rock is thin and lies on a steep failure plane, yet the friable strata were not disrupted by downslope movement. Fault lines and a failure surface, defining the wedge, were used as input to a numerical model of rock wedge stability. Various failure scenarios indicated that the slope was unstable and would have failed catastrophically if not supported by glacial ice in the base of the cirque. The amount of ice required to buttress the slope is insubstantial, indicating likely failure during the thinning of the cirque glacier. We propose that, as the ice thinned, the wedge was lowered slowly down the cirque headwall, gradually exposing the failure plane. A cosmogenic 10Be surface exposure age of 18.0±1.2 ka from the outer surface of the wedge indicates Late Devensian de-icing of the backwall of the cirque, with a second exposure age from the upper portion of the failure plane yielding 12.0±0.8 ka. The 18.0±1.2 ka date is consistent with a small buttressing ice mass being present in the cirque at the time of regional deglaciation. The exposure age of 12.0±0.8 ka represents a minimum age, as the highly fractured surface of the failure plane has experienced post-failure mass-wasting. Considering the chronology, it appears unlikely that the cirque was reoccupied by a substantial ice mass during the Younger Dryas stadial.

AB - Rock slope failures in the Lake District, UK, have been associated with deglacial processes after the Last Glacial Maximum, but the controls and timing of the failures remain poorly known. A cirque headwall failure was investigated to determine failure mechanisms and timing. The translated wedge of rock is thin and lies on a steep failure plane, yet the friable strata were not disrupted by downslope movement. Fault lines and a failure surface, defining the wedge, were used as input to a numerical model of rock wedge stability. Various failure scenarios indicated that the slope was unstable and would have failed catastrophically if not supported by glacial ice in the base of the cirque. The amount of ice required to buttress the slope is insubstantial, indicating likely failure during the thinning of the cirque glacier. We propose that, as the ice thinned, the wedge was lowered slowly down the cirque headwall, gradually exposing the failure plane. A cosmogenic 10Be surface exposure age of 18.0±1.2 ka from the outer surface of the wedge indicates Late Devensian de-icing of the backwall of the cirque, with a second exposure age from the upper portion of the failure plane yielding 12.0±0.8 ka. The 18.0±1.2 ka date is consistent with a small buttressing ice mass being present in the cirque at the time of regional deglaciation. The exposure age of 12.0±0.8 ka represents a minimum age, as the highly fractured surface of the failure plane has experienced post-failure mass-wasting. Considering the chronology, it appears unlikely that the cirque was reoccupied by a substantial ice mass during the Younger Dryas stadial.

U2 - 10.5194/esurf-11-817-2023

DO - 10.5194/esurf-11-817-2023

M3 - Journal article

VL - 11

SP - 817

EP - 833

JO - Earth Surface Dynamics

JF - Earth Surface Dynamics

IS - 4

ER -