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Soil sloughing is soil falling off
bank A bank is a financial institution that accepts deposits from the public and creates a demand deposit while simultaneously making loans. Lending activities can be directly performed by the bank or indirectly through capital markets. Because ...
s and slopes due to a loss in cohesion. Soil sloughs off for the same reasons as landslides in general, with very wet soil being among the leading factors. Sloughing is a relatively shallow phenomenon involving the uppermost layers of the soil. Bare soils are more likely to slough than soils with plant cover in part because the roots help hold the surface against gravity. Unabated soil sloughing can end in massive bank or
slope failure Landslides, also known as landslips, are several forms of mass wasting that may include a wide range of ground movements, such as rockfalls, deep-seated slope failures, mudflows, and debris flows. Landslides occur in a variety of environments, ...
.


Impact on soil quality

According to the Mohr-Coulomb equation, the cohesion of a soil is defined as the shear strength at zero normal pressure on the surface of failure. The
shear force In solid mechanics, shearing forces are unaligned forces acting on one part of a body in a specific direction, and another part of the body in the opposite direction. When the forces are collinear (aligned with each other), they are called t ...
is a function of cohesion, normal stress on rupture surface, and angle of internal friction. Shear force is significantly impacted by drainage conditions. Increasing water content would lead to a weaker shear strength, which in turn decreases the cohesion. Moreover, when the soil water content passes a threshold value, the cohesion drops dramatically, impacting soil compaction and destabilizing soil structure, leading to soil sloughing.


Vegetation

The likelihood of soil sloughing can increase after vegetation is removed from the bank and slope. Vegetation provides root strength and modifies the saturated soil water regime to stabilize the soil. Plant roots can anchor into cracks in bedrock through soil mass and can pass through weak areas to more stable soils to provide interlocking long-fibre binders in weak soil blocks. It requires 137 tons of forces to break a soil mass reinforced by linden, which 130 tones are used to break the roots and only 7 tons are required to lead to bank failure.


Soil Water

Due to precipitation, seasonal changes in
Water content Water content or moisture content is the quantity of water contained in a material, such as soil (called soil moisture), rock, ceramics, crops, or wood. Water content is used in a wide range of scientific and technical areas, and is expressed as ...
can lead to soil sloughing. Soil sloughing is also an indicator of active soil movement and frequently requires action to reduce or prevent bank and slope failure. Soil water content is highly related to the mass erosion that leads to soil sloughing or even slopes failure. Active
pore water pressure Pore water pressure (sometimes abbreviated to pwp) refers to the pressure of groundwater held within a soil or rock, in gaps between particles ( pores). Pore water pressures below the phreatic level of the groundwater are measured with piezometers. ...
can reduce the shear strength by up to 60% and lower cohesion through leaching and eluviation. The loss of root strength following harvesting decreases the safety factor to a level where a moderate storm with associated pore water pressure rising can result in slope failure, despite the deforestation event that happened in the past and root reinforcement had increased. Vegetation help remove some quantity of soil moisture by
evapotranspiration Evapotranspiration (ET) is the combined processes by which water moves from the earth’s surface into the atmosphere. It covers both water evaporation (movement of water to the air directly from soil, canopies, and water bodies) and transpi ...
. Most slope failures by storms occur when the soil is saturated. Moreover, Soil moisture in the deforested area is higher than in forested areas.


See also

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Cave-in A cave-in is a collapse of a geologic formation, mine or structure which may occur during mining, tunneling, or steep-walled excavation such as trenching. Geologic structures prone to spontaneous cave-ins include alvar, tsingy and other limes ...
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Cave-in (excavation) Digging, also referred to as excavation, is the process of using some implement such as claws, hands, manual tools or heavy equipment, to remove material from a solid surface, usually soil, sand or rock on the surface of Earth. Digging is actua ...
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Slump (geology) A slump is a form of mass wasting that occurs when a coherent mass of loosely consolidated materials or a rock layer moves a short distance down a Grade_(slope), slope. Movement is characterized by sliding along a concave-upward or planar surface ...
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Soil stabilization ''Soil stabilization'' a general term for any physical, chemical, mechanical, biological, or combined method of changing a natural soil to meet an engineering purpose. Improvements include increasing the weight bearing capabilities, tensile stren ...


References

{{reflist Landslide types