Abstract

Landslides in surficial deposits occur commonly in the urban environment of British Columbia. Three groups of surficial materials are especially prone to slope failure. These are glaciomarine sediments, glaciolacustrine deposits, and glacial till that mantles steep mountain slopes. The geological and geotechnical characteristics of these three materials are examined and discussed.The sensitivity, metastable fabric, and geological heterogeneity of glaciomarine sediments control their landslide behaviour. A regional variation in glaciolacustrine deposits is suggested. The Southern Interior and Columbia deposits are dominated by silt varves and those of the Northern Interior by clay varves. The silts are sensitive and collapsible under certain moisture and loading conditions. The effect of urbanisation on these silts in the semiarid Southern Interior is considerable. The retrogressive behaviour of slides in silts and clays in urban areas is also examined.Open-slope and channelled debris flows in till mantles are discussed. They occur mainly on steep slopes in the Coast Ranges as a response to heavy, relief-induced rainfall. The effect of urbanization on slope stability is also discussed.

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