Kansas Geological Survey, Public Information Circular (PIC) 13
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Bedrock: General term for the solid rock that underlies the soil.
Block slide: A mass of soil and rock that moves along a straight failure surface without rotation or internal deformation in the landslide mass.
Clay: A group of submicroscopic silicate minerals related to mica. Clay-sized particles are less than 0.0039 mm in diameter.
Competent rock: Hard rock layers that resist weathering.
Creep: Slow, imperceptible movement of soil and rock downslope.
Earth flow: A mass of soil that moves downslope and undergoes internal deformation. During an earth flow, the landslide mass breaks apart.
Expansive soil: Soil containing clay minerals that increase in volume when wet and decrease when dry.
Failure surface: A planar surface at the base of the landslide along which motion has occurred; it separates the material that has moved from the stationary material.
Head: The upslope portion of a landslide.
Hydraulic conductivity: Capability of water to move through soil or rock.
Landslide: A mass of soil and rock that moved downslope by gravity.
Lobe: A bulge in the ground surface where soil and rock mounds at the toe of a landslide.
Rock fall: Free-fall of rock blocks from a cliff or rock outcrop.
Scarp: Steeply dipping region of exposed soil and rock that marks the upslope end of a landslide.
Slump: A mass of soil and rock that moves along a curved failure surface with rotation but without internal deformation of the landslide material.
Soil (engineering usage): All loose (unconsolidated) material between the ground surface and the underlying bedrock, including stream, river, and glacial sediments.
Subsidence: Sinking or settling of the ground surface caused when soil or rock collapses into a void. Subsidence can be natural (a sinkhole) or human induced (due to underground mining or pumping of petroleum or water).
Tension gashes: Cracks in the ground surface caused by stretching or buckling of the landslide mass during failure.
Toe: The downslope portion of a landslide.
Water content: The amount of water by weight in the soil. Water content is found by dividing the weight of water in the soil by the weight of dry soil.
Weather, Weathering: Physical and chemical processes that disintegrate bedrock and form soil.
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Additional Reading and Internet Sites
Kansas Geological Survey, Public Outreach
Web version April 1999
http://www.kgs.ku.edu/Publications/pic13/pic13_glossary.html