This is like the tornado question -- should the landslides have their own thread and perhaps in the Geology Forum?
This sort of weather-caused big slide event seems to tie in to hurricanes: mention Nelson County here, for instance, and everyone thinks of Camille.
Another example: Not all of that sediment that has buried homes and communities comes from the riverbed and its shores. Landslides dump massive amounts of dirt into the raging water (got that from Dave Petley's Eos post on Myanmar).
Will go on posting landslide stuff here but will be glad to change threads/forum, if people prefer that.
Just a couple of big-headline news stories at first search:
Parts of I-40, I-26 to remain closed for days, according to NCDOT
by Justin Berger and Kelly Doty
Sat, September 28th 2024 at 2:46 PM
https://wlos.com/news/local/gallery...conditions-asheville-buncombe-haywood?photo=1
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Story
New York Times -- the interviews with local officials give some idea of the size of
this facet of the Helene calamity:
Power and Communication Outages Hamper Assessment of Landslides
With communication lines down in the mountains amid Helene, early reports were unclear about how many landslides had occurred and the extent of damage from the storm.
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Story
BTW, from his tweets and blog posts, Dave Petley strikes this layperson as not particularly single-minded on "climate change -- the issue." He talks sense about this very complex Earth process, taking no sides, and appears to have an open, curious mind -- I wish the Gray Lady had brought him in on a more specifically landslide-related topic.
The closing quote in that story from an Asheville-area geologist:
“I would like to be wrong,” Mr. Prince said, “but I anticipate some hard days ahead for western North Carolina.”