Welcome!

This blog provides commentary on interesting geological events occurring around the world in the context of my own work. This work is, broadly, geological fluid dynamics. The events that I highlight here are those that resonate with my professional life and ideas, and my goal is to interpret them in the context of ideas I've developed in my research. The blog does not represent any particular research agenda. It is written on a personal basis and does not seek to represent the University of Illinois, where I am a professor of geology and physics. Enjoy Geology in Motion! I would be glad to be alerted to geologic events of interest to post here! I hope that this blog can provide current event materials that will make geology come alive.

Banner image is by Ludie Cochrane..

Susan Kieffer can be contacted at s1kieffer at gmail.com


Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Volcanic ash clouds and volcanologists trying to get to Australia!

Puyehue volcano erupting on June 6, 2011,
producing ash that has now (June 21) travelled around
the world one and a half times.
Photo by Francisco Negroni,
Agenci Uno/European Pressphoto Agency
My next few weeks of travel, as well as those of tens of thousands around the world trying to get to and from Australia are going to be interesting! I'm scheduled to go to the joint meeting of the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics (IUGG) and the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth's Interior (IAVCEI). The reason? The on-going eruption of Puyehue-Cordon Caulle volcano in Chile.  The ash from this volcano has travelled across the southern Atlantic Oceans, under Africa and on to the Indian Ocean, impacting Australia and New Zealand along the way.  A lot of volcanologists, who normally love volcanic eruptions, are going to be tic'd off at this one! Especially our colleague, Ray Cas, who is the Chairman of the joint Australia and New Zealand Organising (yes, that's spelled correctly--it's Aussie) Committee!!


Good luck, Ray!


The ash would not have normally come near Australia, according to Andrew Tupper, head of the Volcanic Ash Advisory Center. However, the jet stream brought a low pressure system that grabbed some of the ash cloud.  Tupper is optimistic that it will clear out in a day or two.  Tupper says that "The low pressure system, although it is annoying, does have the beneficial effect that it's helping to break up the cloud itself, perhaps stopping it from coming around (over Australia) a third time." The ash has now gone around the world one and a half times.

Posting will be irregular this summer, check back and have a good summer as well (or, winter if you are "down under"!)

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Why old dams are dangerous: Martis Creek Dam, Polaris fault, and Reno

Martis Creek Dam and reservoir in winter
Photographer Michael Nevins
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
public domain image
Martis Creek Dam is in Nevada County, California, about 6 kilometers east of Truckee, about 56 km upstream from Reno.  The lake is next to the Truckee-Tahoe Airport (runway in left of photo). The highway in the foreground is California State Route 267.  This winter scene shows the lake in winter when it is fairly full.

This dam is one of 10 dams in the U.S. that has been judged to have "urgent and compelling" safety concerns according to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The dam, which was completed in 1972, has significant leakage and was believed to lie close to two fault zones. If the dam fails, potentially parts of Reno could be flooded.

The dam is an earthen embankment, underlain by glacial outwash. It has a history of excessive seepage during reservoir test fillings, including sand boils through the downstream toe, and seepage along stratigraphic contacts adjacent to the spillway. These concerns, along with the two known faults, have prevented it from being used at its design level. (Note: a post here about sand boils, and an update on that post: the levee did fail and the town of Hamburg is now in danger of flooding.)

The plot has now thickened: this month, Hunter et al. reported in the Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America that Lidar work there revealed a new fault, now named the Polaris fault.  It's 35 km long and has the potential to generate a magnitude 6.4-6.9 earthquake. It exhibits "youthful and laterally continuous tectonic geomorphic features" along its full length. It represents a significant seismic hazard to the greater Truckee-Lake Tahoe-Reno-Carson City area.

Reference: Hunter et al., LiDAR-Assisted Identification of an Active Fault near Truckee, California, Buletin of the Seismological Society of America, vol. 101 (3), p. 1162-1182, June 2011.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Brutal April weather

Statewide precipitation for April 2011
NOAA
NOAA has released a report that confirms my intuition about where I live: April in Illinois was a miserably wet month! Nearby in our neighboring state, the residents of Hamburg, Iowa, are battling flooding caused by the breach of their levee system, reported in this earlier post.

But, my personal misery was small compared to the real disasters:

  • More than 500 confirmed tornadoes, possibly more than 800; very likely to approach the all-time monthly record of 542 tornadoes set in May, 2003.
  • 358 fatalities related to two tornado outbreaks
  • Record rainfall all along the Ohio River Valley
  • Record flooding along the Mississippi River
  • Drought and wildfires in the Southern Plains
  • $10-15 billion in damages
Note in this graphic that Arizona is listed as "near normal" conditions, but neighboring New Mexico is "below normal" in precipitation. The current wildfire, the largest in the history of Arizona, is actually nearly on the Arizona-New Mexico border.

It's being blamed on La Nina causing above-average snowpacks and heavy fall and spring rains and causing above-average water temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico. This warm water fed the tornado. 

We have passed out of the strongest part of the La Nina, but hurricane season is now upon us.  The Climate Prediction Center of NOAA has projected that this will be a busier-than-normal hurricane season.  


Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Snakes and meteorites?

Carlos Martiez and his meteorite found on Memorial Day.
Photo from here.
The Greeley Tribune reported on Sunday that Carlos Martinez a bull-snake led Carlos Martinez to a special rock--a 4" iron meteorite shaped like a heart! He noticed his neighbors watching something in front of his house, and went out to see that a 5'-long bull snake was slithering out of his bushes.  When he looked back into his yard, he noticed the meteorite lying in a small crater in his yard.  University of Northern Colorado professor Bob Brunswig confirmed that the rock was a meteorite.

When my son was growing up, I noticed a gopher snake in our yard. Determined to show him that not all women were afraid of snakes, I gritted my teeth and reviewed my knowledge (or made up a theory) of how to pick up a snake: grab him behind the head and grab his tail.  I wasn't sure if he'd be cold and slimy or hot, but thought that I could deal with that.  What I didn't factor in was that this snake was about 4' of sheer muscle.  When I successfully grabbed him, he gave one big muscle contraction, I threw him into the air and yelled "RUN!!" So much for images...

A bit of terminology: A meteoroid is a pice of rock or ice moving through space, the term generally applied to objects smaller than asteroids. A meteor is a meteoroid that has entered the earth's atmosphere, a shooting star.  Most meteors smaller than a pea will burn up in the atmosphere due to friction with the atmosphere as the fall. A meteorite is a meteor that survives its descent.

Typical velocities of encounter with the earth are 11 km/second for objects that come in from the asteroid belt, and 51 km/second for comets.  It is likely that this small heart-shaped meteorite broke off a larger body that was entering the atmosphere and was slowed way down by friction with the atmosphere. Still, Carlos is lucky that it landed in his lawn and not in his house! The chances of a meteorite hitting a house are small, but it has happened.  In 2003 hundreds of fragments of a meteorite fell in the Park Forest area of Chicago, several fell through roofs of houses and one through the roof of a fire station.  In the same year, a 20 kg (~44 pound) stone meteorite crashed through a two-story house in New Orleans, landing in the basement.  Poor Mrs. Hodges, asleep on a couch, was hit on the hip by a 10 pound stone meteorite in 1954...and lived to tell about it!

For those who would like to learn about the types of meteorites, here's a primer.


Wednesday, June 8, 2011

ExxonMobile strikes oil in Gulf of Mexiso

I try to keep this column from being a political forum, but I would like to point out the perspective of today's big announcement that "ExxonMObile strikes oil in Gulf of Mexico."

In case you don't read to the end--yes, it could yield 700 million barrels, "yes, it could power the U.S. for 28 days, based on the daily consumption of 25 million barrels." The world uses about 72 million barrels of crude oil per day, so it's enough to power the world for 10 days.  It will take a couple of years to be drilled, collected, refined and sold to consumers according to this source. Is anyone out there asking if this is a wise course of action, to spend years of resources to develop a supply that is literally providing a few days of relief to our energy problems?  

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Largest landslide in New York State: 82 acres sliding in the Adirondacks

Photo by Lori Van Buren/Times Union
There is an excellent collection of photos in this article.
A record landslide started in New York state on May 6 in the hamlet of Keene Valley on Porter Mountain, a mountain pockmarked with scars of prehistoric landslides.  In a wonderful understatement about the power of gravity, associate state geologist and director of the state Geologic Mapping Program, Andrew Kozlowski said "We are talking about hundreds of thousands of tons and it is all moving, gravity has taken over."
Scarp at head of landslide
    















As of May 28, an 82 acre patch had slid 20 feet down the mountain, and was sliding a few inches a day. Spring melt from a heavy snowpack and heavy spring rains (9-12 inches in early May) had saturated the ground, triggering the slide. The ground on the mountain is composed of sand and glacial till.  It had been hoped that the spring blossoming of the trees would draw enough water out of the ground to slow or stop the slide. Unfortunately, that has not been the case. The movement stopped for a few days, but then picked up at an increasing rate and is now moving up to a foot a day. Residents are trying to move their homes, but insurance does not cover landslides in this area, the cost is ~$100,000, and time is running out.  One couple reports 15 feet of open air between their bedroom and the ground below (see article link in figure above).
     As of today, the TimesUnion reports that the scarp at the head of the landslide is eight tenths of a mile long and that the slide continues about a half-mile down the mountain. The vertical drop between the scarp and the toe is 300 feet. Kozlowski says that LIDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) mapping might have revealed landslide risks under the thick forest canopy, but has never been done.

Monday, June 6, 2011

"Missouri levee boil forces evacuations"

I've enjoyed a month's vacation from blogging, but now am getting back the creative urge, so hopefully I can post more regularly on the many interesting events, both local and global, involving fluid mechanics in geology!

A sand boil on April 27, 201; along the levee near Hickman, Ky.
Army Corp of Engineers have built a sand bag ring to allow the water
to seep out but to contain sediment within the ring, in hopes of
building up pressure from the weight of the sediment to prevent
a major break.
AP Photo/The Paducah Sun, by Stephen Lance Dennee,
as published in the Washington Post
CNN is reporting today that a "boil" has caused an evacuation of about 600 people from Hamburg, Iowa. Hmmmm...I hadn't a clue about boiling levees! Turns out that it's a well-known and well-studied phenomenon because it can lead to rapid levee failure. The boil noticed today appears to be a hole less than 1.5" diameter that created a small geyser of water erupting onto the dry side of the levee. A-ha--if they had said "geyser," I'd have gotten the idea much sooner! Black Hawk helicopters are being used to drop sand bags onto the levee because it is deemed to dangerous to send in a ground crew.

Here's a primer from the Army Corps of Engineers on levee failure and repair. A "sand boil" from a levee is a small hole created by water seepage through the levee. Water flows through (sometimes being so turbulent that it appears to boil), creating the "geysers" noticed today.  Sand boils occur in earthen dams, but the phenomenon is usually referred to as "piping," not boiling.  If the seepage water is dirty, it indicates that material is being eroded from the levee and that the integrity of the levee is threatened.  If you ever need to sandbag your premises, check out the instructions on the primer sheet! Even shows how to reduce fatigue while filling sandbags!

I discussed liquefaction earlier in a post about the Canterbury earthquake, without pointing out that the term "sand boil" is sometimes applied to those features.