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VII.—Landslips and Sinkings in Cheshire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

Landslips are important agents in modifying the surface of the earth, frequently adding to the picturesque appearance of the district in which they occur, and occasionally causing considerable mischief by the destruction of villages, or the covering of fertile ground, as the fall of Rossberg in Switzerland in 1806, and in our own country the landslip near Axmouth, and the undercliff of the Isle of Wight, are familiar examples. They are generally caused by the action of water dissolving or loosening and carrying away some bed low down in the local series, when the upper strata, being no longer supported, break by their own weight, and slide down to a lower level, the amount of their displacement and the rapidity of their movements being determined by the inclination of the underlying beds.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1874

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References

page 259 note 1 The villages of Goldau and Busingen, the hamlet of Huelloch, a large part of the village of Lowertz, the farms of Unter- und Ober-Rothen, and many scattered houses in the valley, were overwhelmed by the ruin. Goldau was crushed by masses of rocks, and Lowertz invaded by a stream of mud. The lives lost were estimated at from 800 to 900. De la Beche, Geol, Observer, p. 22.

page 259 note 2 Principles of Geology, p. 540.

page 261 note 1 As bearing upon this subject, we would refer to a paper by the Rev. J. S. Tute “On Certain Natural Pits in the Neighbourhood of Ripon,” GEOL. MAG. 1868, Vol. Y. p. 178.—Edit. Geol. Mag.