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Characterisation of a volcanic residual soil and its implications for large landslide phenomena: application to Tenerife,Canary Islands
Institution:1. Institute of Geomechanics, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100081, PR China;2. China Geological Survey, M.L.R, Beijing 100037, PR China;3. State Key Laboratory of Geohazard Prevention and Geoenvironment Protection, Chengdu University of Technology, Chengdu, Sichuan, 610059, PR China
Abstract:Large landslides are common processes during the evolution of volcanoes and individual events can exceed several cubic kilometres in volume. Volcanic slope failures are a significant risk for the neighbouring population due to their huge volumes and great runout distances. Around the Canary archipelago, a total of seventeen deposits of large landslides have been found, and on Tenerife, seven large landslides have affected the subaerial and submarine morphology during the last ~6 Ma. However, the causes of such mass movements are still poorly understood. This work analyses the events around the Canary Islands and focuses on the ones that occurred on Tenerife in order to obtain new insights into the mechanisms of large volcanic landslides. The study is divided into a first part that includes site investigations examining the general features favouring large-scale failures at volcanoes. The second part describes the laboratory tests used to analyse a residual soil that may be the potential slip surface of the slides on Tenerife. The site investigation revealed that regional tectonics and the climate have a significant influence on the spatial distribution of the landslides. Moreover, morphological and geological features such as deep fluvial canyons, a high coastal cliff and persistent dike intrusion may favour the initiation of slope failure. A typical residual soil sample from the lateral scarp of the La Orotava amphitheatre on Tenerife was studied by carrying out standard laboratory tests. The microstructure was analysed using environmental scanning electron microscopy and a particular bonding was found. This bonding was also detected by the geotechnical tests. Consolidation tests and direct shear tests revealed that the mechanical behaviour of the residual soil changes greatly if the bonding of the soil is broken. The bonded structure generally fails when the effective normal stress surpasses the yield strength of the bonding. In the case of large volcanic landslides with thicknesses up to several hundred meters, the high overburden easily exceeds this yield strength and generates a broken bonding. Therefore, volcanic residual soils, such as the one analysed in this study, are perfect candidates for the potential failure surfaces of large volcanic landslides. Referring to the La Orotava events, we assume that residual soil layers and morphological, geological and climatic features reduced the slope stability to critical conditions, whereas a strong earthquake associated with a caldera collapse episode may have finally triggered the landslide. The results obtained indicate that the residual soils play an important role in affecting the stability of volcano slopes and their destabilising influence significantly favours large-scale sliding. We suggest that the results obtained from this study can be applied to other locations since volcanic residual soils are common in volcanic areas.
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