Monday, June 21, 2010

2010 UNR Geology Field Camp Maps

A particularly good year in a very complicated area. Collage includes the NAIP image and my map...now to grade them and all the related items by the end of the day.

Posted via email from Fresh Geologic Froth

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Field tour

This year's field camp made the full trip around the Owyhee map
area...in spite of unfounded concerns by some local officials that the
vans just couldn't make it. We made it. Not a single issue with the
vans...so there.

Posted via email from Fresh Geologic Froth

Another year, another field camp.

A week of crazy weather, rattlesnakes, and extreme geology and
geomorphology has come to an end. This year's field camp was
exceptionally good. Managed to get 24 students well up to speed on
intracanyon lava flows, immense and numerous landslides, and
catastrophic flood deposits in a matter of days. Most of the students
will agree that they got nearly a semester's worth of education in one
week.

This year we mapped part of the Hole in the Ground along the Owyhee
River and camped at Birch Creek. A brilliant plan.

Posted via email from Fresh Geologic Froth

Thursday, June 10, 2010

Attabad spillway video

This is from Dave's Landslide Blog:

Attabad spillway video: "Thanks to a number of people for drawing my attention to the Hunzaonline video on youtube that shows the spillway in action. The caption indicates that this was collected on the 8th June:



Three observations about this video:
  1. It shows that the major restriction on flow is still the large boulder at the saddle of the spillway;
  2. A second boulder has formed substantive constriction downstream as well, but this is not controlling the overall flow
  3. There is still considerable scour occurring, especially on the downstream side of the boulder, upstream of the boulder towards the neck of the channel, and elsewhere on the banks of the channel.
Meanwhile, the Pamir Times reports that 'An international expert reportedly suggested the government to blow two large boulders present in the spillway but the government has decided to act against the suggestion'.

In case anyone was wondering, that expert is not me! Whilst I wouldn't completely rule out the possibility of a controlled blast, this would need to be undertaken with extreme care, and only after a full analysis of the consequences had been undertaken. I would in particular want to see an evaluation of the likely flood that the blast might trigger, and the potential for triggering further slides on the sides of the valley. However, this is not an excuse for inaction - NDMA really need to move quickly now to evaluate the range of options, and to communicate the pros and cons more widely.

As per my post yesterday, I will use the Hunza Monitoring Site to host updates on the situation at Attabad, and this site to provide a commentary. I will put a new set of data on the monitoring blog later this morning.
"

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Owyhee Map at 1:50,000

Almost there...this is the version to support the Field Camp tour next weekend. It shows the various vents, etc.

Posted via email from Fresh Geologic Froth

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Oh right...the Owyhee Map...almost forgot about it.

For various reasons, I have dropped the Clark County mega-mega map for a day to work on the very nearly complete Owyhee River area map. In real life, this map is 40 inches by 40 inches at 1:36,000. Although I have compiled the mapping in the river corridor down to about 1:4500 in most places. Heading out to teach field camp there in a couple of days. Learned some handy new tricks in ArcGIS that really have improved map data management and symbolization. Will share them when my cloning experiment is successful.

Posted via email from Fresh Geologic Froth