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Energy
and Work During Mass Movements
by
Stephen Marshak
To understand what happens during downslope mass movement, we need
to consider a few basic concepts from physics, namely potential energy,
kinetic energy, force, and work. To simplify our discussion, let’s
look at a simple example: a rock sitting at the top of a mountain
moves to the bottom of the mountain.
Any object in a gravitational field feels an attractive force.
Earth’s gravity wants to pull objects closer to the center of the
planet, so it tries to pull the rock down to a lower elevation. While
the rock sits at the top of the mountain, therefore, it stores gravitation
potential energyit has the potential to fall down, if
given the chance. If the rock starts to tumble down, most of this
potential energy transforms into kinetic energy, the energy
of motion, and the rest transforms into heat, generated by friction.
Once a mass starts moving, it has momentum. Physicists define momentum
as the product of mass time velocity (p=mxv), so the greater the
mass, the greater its momentum at a given velocity, and the greater
the velocity, the greater its momentum for a given mass. When the
moving rock strikes other rocks in its path, it transfers art of
its momentum to the other rocks and sets them in motion-these rocks,
in turn, can set other rocks in motion. You see this phenomenon happen
when a moving billiard ball strikes another. Thus, a single rock
falling down a cliff can trigger a large avalanche.
We can also look at a mass movement in terms of the "Work"
involved. Physicists define work as the product of force time displacement
(the change in the position of the mass); in equation form, W=FxDd.
Remember that force (F) equals mass times acceleration, so
the application of force to an object can change its velocity. Geological
forces (such as may be caused by a continent-continent collision)
do work when they lift rocks to form a mountain range. People do
work when they lift debris and dump it in a pile. When a rock falls
from the top of a mountain or debris pile down to the adjacent valley
floor, gravity does the work. The amount of work done by gravity
in moving the rock down equals the amount done by geologic or human
forces in lifting the rock up.
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