Avalanches overflowing a dam: dead zone, granular bore and run-out shortening

Authors: Faug, Thierry; Chanut, Benoit; Naaim, Mohamed; Perrin, Bertrand

Source: Annals of Glaciology, Volume 49, Number 1, October 2008 , pp. 77-82(6)

Publisher: International Glaciological Society

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Abstract:

The influence of a dam on granular avalanches was investigated. Small-scale laboratory experiments were designed to study the effectiveness of dams built to protect against large-scale dense snow avalanches. These experiments consisted of releasing a granular mass that first flowed down an inclined channel, then hit and overflowed a dam spanning the channel exit and finally spread out on an inclined unconfined run-out zone. First, we measured the volume retained upstream of the obstacle and the overrun length downstream of the obstacle. In the avalanche regime studied here, no simple relation was found between the volume retained and the run-out shortening resulting from the obstacle. The results highlighted that the avalanche run-out was also shortened by complex local energy dissipation. Second, we report the study of the granular deposit propagating upstream of the dam. We show that there was a change in behaviour from an overflow-type regime for low dam heights to a bore regime for higher dam heights. Finally, we show that this change in behaviour directly influenced the local energy dissipation and the resulting avalanche run-out shortening downstream of the dam.

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3189/172756408787814799

Publication date: 2008-10-01

More about this publication?
  • The Annals of Glaciology is a peer-reviewed, thematic journal published 2 to 4 times a year by the International Glaciological Society (IGS). Publication frequency is determined and volume/issue numbers assigned by the IGS Council on a year-to-year basis and with a lead time of 3 to 4 years. The Annals of Glaciology is included in the ISI Science Citation Index from volume 50, number 50 onwards.

    Themes can be on any aspect of the study of snow and ice. Individual members can make a suggestion for a theme for an Annals issue to the Secretary General, who will forward it to the IGS Publications Committee. The IGS Publication Committee will make a recommendation for an individual themed Annals issue, together with a potential Annals Chief Editor for that issue, to IGS Council. The IGS Council will make the decision whether to proceed, taking into account the spread of topics and the overall capacity for publication of pages in Annals.

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