Current Conditions - Ferguson Rock Slide, Chronology of Events
Detailed Paper on the Ferguson Rock Slide
During spring 2006, talus from the toe area of a rockblock
slide of about 800,000 m3 buried California State Highway
140, one of the main routes into heavily-visited Yosemite National
Park, USA. Closure of the highway for 92 days caused business
losses of about 4.8 million USD. The rock slide, composed of slate
and phyllite, moved slowly downslope from April to June 2006,
creating a fresh head scarp with 9–12 m of displacement.
Movement of the main rock slide, a re-activation of an older
slide, was triggered by an exceptionally wet spring 2006, following
a very wet spring 2005. As of autumn 2006, most of the main slide
appeared to be at rest, although rocks occasionally continued to
fall from steep, fractured rock masses at the toe area of the slide.
Future behavior of the slide is difficult to predict, but possible
scenarios range from continued scattered rock fall to complete
rapid failure of the entire mass. Although unlikely except under very
destabilizing circumstances, a worst-case, rapid failure of the entire
rock slide could extend across the Merced River, damming the river
and creating a reservoir. As a temporary measure, traffic has been
rerouted to the opposite side of theMerced River at about the same
elevation as the buried section of Highway 140.
A state-of-the-art
monitoring system has been installed to detect movement in the steep
talus slope, movement of the main slide mass, local strong ground
motion from regional earthquakes, and sudden changes in stream
levels, possibly indicating damming of the river by slide material.
![[Photo]: Man with Spider.](slide/spider-sm.jpg)
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