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Filters: Tags: San Bernardino County, California (X) > partyWithName: Highland, Lynn M. (X)

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The April 1998 El Niño-Triggered Anzar Road landslide, San Benito County, California El Niño-driven rainfall triggered many landslides and debris flows in northern and north-central California during the winter and spring of 1997-98. The 1997-98 rainy season began normally in the fall of 1997, but turned unusually wet in late November. The 1998 Anzar Road landslide occurred as a reactivation of an old landslide in Pleistocene nonmarine claystone, sandstone and conglomerate immediately adjacent to the San Andreas rift Zone. Destructive movement began during the early morning of april 22 as a moderately deep-seated earth slide within the area of the old landslide. This slide, on an average slope of 12 degrees,...
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The April 1998 El Niño-Triggered Anzar Road landslide, San Benito County, California El Niño-driven rainfall triggered many landslides and debris flows in northern and north-central California during the winter and spring of 1997-98. The 1997-98 rainy season began normally in the fall of 1997, but turned unusually wet in late November. The 1998 Anzar Road landslide occurred as a reactivation of an old landslide in Pleistocene nonmarine claystone, sandstone and conglomerate immediately adjacent to the San Andreas rift Zone. Destructive movement began during the early morning of april 22 as a moderately deep-seated earth slide within the area of the old landslide. This slide, on an average slope of 12 degrees,...
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The April 1998 El Niño-Triggered Anzar Road landslide, San Benito County, California. El Niño-driven rainfall triggered many landslides and debris flows in northern and north-central California during the winter and spring of 1997-98. The 1997-98 rainy season began normally in the fall of 1997, but turned unusually wet in late November. The 1998 Anzar Road landslide occurred as a reactivation of an old landslide in Pleistocene nonmarine claystone, sandstone and conglomerate immediately adjacent to the San Andreas rift Zone. Destructive movement began during the early morning of april 22 as a moderately deep-seated earth slide within the area of the old landslide. This slide, on an average slope of 12 degrees,...
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The April 1998 El Niño-Triggered Anzar Road landslide, San Benito County, California El Niño-driven rainfall triggered many landslides and debris flows in northern and north-central California during the winter and spring of 1997-98. The 1997-98 rainy season began normally in the fall of 1997, but turned unusually wet in late November. The 1998 Anzar Road landslide occurred as a reactivation of an old landslide in Pleistocene nonmarine claystone, sandstone and conglomerate immediately adjacent to the San Andreas rift Zone. Destructive movement began during the early morning of april 22 as a moderately deep-seated earth slide within the area of the old landslide. This slide, on an average slope of 12 degrees,...


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