Timing, drivers and impacts of the historic Masiere di Vedana rock avalanche (Belluno Dolomites, NE Italy)
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2020
abstract:
The "Masiere di Vedana" rock avalanche, located
in the Belluno Dolomites (NE Italy) at the foot of Mt. Peron,
is reinterpreted as historic on the base of archeological information
and cosmogenic 36Cl exposure dates. The deposit is
9 km2 wide, has a volume of 170Mm3 corresponding to
a pre-detachment rock mass of 130Mm3, and has a maximum
runout distance of 6 km and an H=L ratio of 0:2.
Differential velocities of the rock avalanche moving radially
over different topography and path material lead to the
formation of specific landforms (tomas and compressional
ridges). In the Mt. Peron crown the bedding is subvertical
and includes carbonate lithologies from Lower Jurassic (Calcari
Grigi Group) to Cretaceous (Maiolica) in age. The stratigraphic
sequence is preserved in the deposit with the formations
represented in the boulders becoming younger with
distance from the source area. In the release area the bedding,
the SSE-verging frontal thrust planes, the NW-verging
backthrust planes, the NW-SE fracture planes, and the N-
S Jurassic fault planes controlled the failure and enhanced
the rock mass fragmentation. The present Mt. Peron crown
still shows hundreds-of-metres-high rock prisms bounded by
backwall trenches. Cosmogenic 36Cl exposure ages, mean
1:900:45 ka, indicate failure occurred between 340 BCE
and 560 CE. Although abundant Roman remains were found
in sites surrounding the rock avalanche deposit, none were
found within the deposit, and this is consistent with a late Roman
or early Middle Ages failure. Seismic and climatic conditions
as landslide predisposing factors are discussed. Over
the last few hundred years, earthquakes up to Mw D 6:3, including
that at 365 CE, have affected the Belluno area. Early
in the first millennium, periods of climate worsening with increasing
rainfall occurred in the NE Alps. The combination
of climate and earthquakes induced progressive long-term
damage to the rock until a critical threshold was reached and
the Masiere di Vedana rock avalanche occurred.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Landslides; Venetian Alps
List of contributors:
Monegato, Giovanni
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