A cluster of exceptionally large sediment fans occurs in Val Venosta, a glacial trough in the east-central Alps, Italy. Its 59 tributary valleys generate 49 fans with volume:catchment area ratios varying across four orders of magnitude. Geomorphological and statistical analysis distinguish 'allometric' and 'anomalous' fans. Catastrophic massive slope failure origins are suggested for the anomalous cases. They comprise 'outsize fans' and 'megafans', the latter attaining 400 m cone height and 2700 m radius, and dominating the trough. Above most fans, evidence is found for source cavities of comparable volume. Reconstruction of the missing sides and heads of two tributary valleys reveals lost mountains 700 m deep. They are credible sources for the Malser Haide, a globally significant 11 km-long megafan with an estimated volume of 1650 Mm 3, and the St Valentin outsize fans. Generally, anomalous fans occur where landslides are funnelled, comminuted and controlled through 'debouchures' high enough above the trough floor for conoidal deposition. Although sedimentological data are sparse, these fans may represent a new category of catastrophic slope failure outcome, mimicking conventional sediment fans of incremental origin. The Val Venosta cluster is the largest in the Alps, with concentrated glacial erosion in conducive geology among the possible factors explaining anomalous fan incidence.

Jarman, D., Agliardi, F., Crosta, G. (2011). Megafans and outsize fans from catastrophic rock slope failures in alpine glacial troughs: Malser Haide and the Venosta cluster, Italy. In M. Jaboyedoff (a cura di), Slope Tectonics (pp. 253-277). London : Geological Society, London [10.1144/SP351.14].

Megafans and outsize fans from catastrophic rock slope failures in alpine glacial troughs: Malser Haide and the Venosta cluster, Italy

AGLIARDI, FEDERICO;CROSTA, GIOVANNI
2011

Abstract

A cluster of exceptionally large sediment fans occurs in Val Venosta, a glacial trough in the east-central Alps, Italy. Its 59 tributary valleys generate 49 fans with volume:catchment area ratios varying across four orders of magnitude. Geomorphological and statistical analysis distinguish 'allometric' and 'anomalous' fans. Catastrophic massive slope failure origins are suggested for the anomalous cases. They comprise 'outsize fans' and 'megafans', the latter attaining 400 m cone height and 2700 m radius, and dominating the trough. Above most fans, evidence is found for source cavities of comparable volume. Reconstruction of the missing sides and heads of two tributary valleys reveals lost mountains 700 m deep. They are credible sources for the Malser Haide, a globally significant 11 km-long megafan with an estimated volume of 1650 Mm 3, and the St Valentin outsize fans. Generally, anomalous fans occur where landslides are funnelled, comminuted and controlled through 'debouchures' high enough above the trough floor for conoidal deposition. Although sedimentological data are sparse, these fans may represent a new category of catastrophic slope failure outcome, mimicking conventional sediment fans of incremental origin. The Val Venosta cluster is the largest in the Alps, with concentrated glacial erosion in conducive geology among the possible factors explaining anomalous fan incidence.
Capitolo o saggio
Sediment fan; catastrophic slope failure; Val Venosta
English
Slope Tectonics
Jaboyedoff, M
2011
978-1-86239-324-0
351
Geological Society, London
253
277
Jarman, D., Agliardi, F., Crosta, G. (2011). Megafans and outsize fans from catastrophic rock slope failures in alpine glacial troughs: Malser Haide and the Venosta cluster, Italy. In M. Jaboyedoff (a cura di), Slope Tectonics (pp. 253-277). London : Geological Society, London [10.1144/SP351.14].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/25206
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