Selected Examples of Mass Wasting
on Mount Shasta

A Term Paper
by Bob Musgrove
Geography 581 Geomorphology
Professor: Dr. Mairs
Southern Oregon University 
 Introduction | Snow Avalanches | Jokulhlaups | A Unique Debris Flow | Conclusion | Sources

Conclusions


By briefly examining Mount Shasta's jokulhlaups, snow avalanches, and one unique debris flow, I hope to have made a convincing case that California's highest volcano does indeed present non-eruptive hazards worthy of study and deserving of our respect. Without so much as an eruptive puff of steam, Mount Shasta has blocked roads and water supplies, polluted rivers, drowned vegetation in mud, cleared 300-year old forests, and threatened climbers. Similar principles of physics apply to each mass wasting event. As physicist Charles Coulomb found, shear strength holds materials in place, and shear failure can occur if the stress is strong enough to overwhelm the forces of cohesion and resistance in the material (Easterbrook 1999). Whether the materials are rock, ice, snow, volcanic debris, or a mixture thereof, the same principles of physics apply. Mount Shasta has proven to be fertile grounds for my own modest studies, and the mountain continues to offer geographers and other students many opportunities for study.

 Introduction | Snow Avalanches | Jokulhlaups | A Unique Debris Flow | Conclusion | Sources

web page authored by Bob Musgrove