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Watauga Rates Highest In
State For Mudslides

An
N.C. Geologic Survey map shows historic landslide
activity in Watauga County.
Click on picture for larger image.
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By Scott Nicholson
Hazardous mudslides are more likely to happen in
Watauga County than in any other county in western North
Carolina, according to a report by a state geology team.
Rick Wooten, a senior geologist with the N.C. Geologic
Survey, said of the six counties targeted for landslide
hazard mapping, Watauga showed the most data suggesting
previous landslides, which he said was a predictor of
future episodes. Of 2,000 landslides listed by the geologists
in compiling a database of modern and prehistoric landslides
in the mountain and Piedmont counties, 600 of those were
in Watauga.
Geologists were in Watauga County this week collecting
data for the county map, which should be released next
year. Wooten said the information will include three maps:
one showing where slides have occurred in the past as
determined by ancient soil deposits; one showing where
they might happen in the future; and one showing where
those mud slides might end up.
Wooten said mudslides range in severity and are usually
triggered by storms and heavy rain. How much erosion constitutes
a landslide is a bit of a subjective determination,
but Wooten said for modern landslides the accounting is
based on structural damage to homes or roadways and are
otherwise expensive to clean up.
Using the Maps
The series of maps in the five counties will enable communities
to evaluate and reduce the risks of building homes and
other structures in landslide-prone areas of the North
Carolina mountains, according to the Department of Environment
and Natural Resources. DENRs Geological Survey section
recently finished maps for Macon County, which suffered
a fatal landslide during Hurricane Ivan in 2004. Five
people were killed and 16 injured when a mudslide traveled
more than two miles. Hurricanes Ivan and Francis triggered
140 landslides in the state during a one-week period.
Because of the potential for down-slope damage, Wooten
said its important to understand how and where the
mud and debris will travel. They travel beyond the
slopes, Wooten said. The debris flows and
carries a lot of water, so a landslide is mobile. We need
to know how far it might go.
Wooten cited the 1940 flood, in which a number of people
lost their lives, as an example of mud sweeping for miles
and carrying away houses and victims. He said that flood
affected Elk Creek and Stony Fork the most, suggesting
those areas might be more prone to fatal landslides in
the future. That part of the escarpment is susceptible,
Wooten said. Its not evenly distributed (across
the county).
Wootens team developed the landslide hazard maps
for Macon County and will complete maps for five other
mountain counties during the next two years.
Landslide hazard maps will be available for Buncombe and
Watauga counties by next summer, according to DENR. Maps
for Haywood, Henderson and Jackson counties are expected
to be available in 2008.
The three-year Landslide Hazard Mapping Program was funded
with $1.3 million from the state Hurricane Recovery Act
of 2005. The act was designed to provide disaster assistance
to people, businesses and public agencies that suffered
damage from any of the six hurricanes that struck North
Carolina in 2004.
How They Map
Wooten is senior geologist on the six-member team assigned
to work on the project. They have mapped the locations
of both recent and old landslides recognized by deposits
of rock, sand and clay. The geologists are using several
state-of-the art technologies, including topographic data
from a system called Light Detecting and Ranging
that uses laser beams to more accurately calculate distances.
They also used computer modeling, satellite and aerial
photography, and data from geographic information and
global positioning systems.
Wooten said the information would be distributed as widely
as possible, especially in digital formats and Web sites
that allow for easy public access. He said local governments
could easily integrate the data using global information
system mapping and consider the information in land use
planning.
Boones history
Wooten said the team had looked at the mudslide at the
White Laurel housing development in Boone several years
ago and had also been following the Town of Boones
steep-slope ordinance debate. These maps strictly
pertain to safety and slope stability, Wooten said.
Theyll be available to anybody and were
working out how to distribute them in a fully functional
format.
A 23-page booklet titled When the Ground Moves:
A Citizens Guide To Geologic Hazards in North Carolina,
provides information about landslides, abandoned mines,
sinkholes, flooding and other developments. While there
are fees for physical copies of the maps or booklets,
Wooten said it should be available on the DENR Web site
when completed (www.enr.state.nc.us/).
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