Saturday morning a large pre existing landslide let loose on the Stilliguamish River. This slide has caused trouble before, but this time it has proven to be fatal with three killed and several injured. This failure was at a much larger scale than previous events and has blocked the river. This blockage is much more serious than the recent short duration blockage on the Nooksack River a few weeks ago. Strongly worded evacuation orders have been issued for downstream residents.
Image of landslide viewed from the south looking north up from the Stilliguamish Valley
(photo, Snohomish County)
View of landslide deposit (Snohomish County)
View is from the north looking south down to the valley floor
State highway is buried along the lower edge of thick patch of trees
The pooled water of the Stilliguamish River can be seen on left
The river flow is from left to right
Landslide deposit (Snohomish County)
View is from the east looking west down the valley just upstream of the slide
Highway can be seen on lower right.
Brown strip on left is he electric power transmission line corridor
It appears that the river is pooling and beginning to flood areas beyond the slide area.
Google earth image of landslide area
I marked the outer edge of part of the slide deposit from the Snohomish County photos.
AERIAL VIEW
Seattle Times has some excellent perspective pictures:
http://seattletimes.com/html/photogalleries/localnews2023201892/
I'll likely have more later. This slide will be well covered by the news and I am sure a variety of agency folks will provide some good rapid response assessments. I'll add some bits as I see appropriate.
What I will add now though:
1) News coverage is a bit odd as news helicopters from news stations in Washington State have been grounded due to a news helicopter accident.
2) People really should be forced to evacuate under these conditions. A river dam burst flood is not something you want to be in. Life is more important than possessions.
3) This slide was a preexisting problem. There was concern that it would block the river a few years ago. Landslide wonks knew exactly where this slide was as soon as it made the news. I looked at this slide area last summer. It was clearly bad news then and with very heavy multiple rain events the past six weeks landslides - particularly big ones are not a surprise.