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REPORT:
The Physics of Debris Flows


-- Richard M. Iverson, 1997,
The Physics of Debris Flows: IN: Reviews of Geophysics, 35, 3, August 1997, p.245-296, published by American Geophysical Union, Paper #97RG00426

Recent advances in theory and experimentation motivate a thorough reassessment of the physics of debris flows. Analyses of flows of dry, granular solids and solid-fluid mixtures provide a foundation for a comprehensive debris flow theory, and experiments provide data that reveal the strengths and limitations of theoretical models. Both debris flow materials and dry granular materials can sustain shear stresses while remaining static; both can deform in a slow, tranquil mode characterized by enduring, frictional grain contacts; and both can flow in a more rapid, agitated mode characterized by brief, inelastic grain collisions. In debris flows, however, pore fluid that is highly viscous and nearly incompressible, composed of water with suspended silt and clay, can strongly mediate intergranular friction and collisions. -- Iverson, 1997




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04/04/02, Lyn Topinka