Nature Notes From Crater Lake
Volume 13, October 1947
Redcloud Rock Slide
By L. T. Grose, Ranger-Naturalist
At 11:10 A.M., July 15, a tremendous
blast, followed by a rumbling noise, resounded around the caldera walls.
It sounded much like a series of thunder claps, and evidently, everyone
thought it to be thunder from a lingering dark cumulus cloud overhead.
Actually this "thunder" was the collapse and slide of a section of
Redcloud Cliff. A study of the slide is significant because of its being
typical of the larger rock slides and mass erosion within the caldera.
A slab, estimated to be 250 x 200 x 8
feet, of the older dacite flow under and immediately to the south of the
V-shaped mass of Redcloud Cliff spawled off and slid 9/10 of the way
down to the lake shore. One third of the largest blocks were carried
farthest by their momentum, but none of them reached the lake. Slight
sorting of the debris is evident on the lower portion, the heavier
blocks being followed by increasingly smaller fragments. The original,
underlying talus was pushed to the shore, extending the fan to the
water's edge. Therefore, the total rock slide continued 1,000 feet from
the base of Redcloud Cliff to the water's edge. Most of the larger
fragments came to rest approximately half way down, and a smaller
portion were stopped by the bottle-necking effect of big and little
Castle Rock formations. In these higher portions there is little or no
evidence of sorting.
The slide fragments came to an unstable
rest at the maximum angle of repose, in this case of angular blocks, 43
degrees. It is believed that this angle is reached only in the upper
third, and that the slide curves, as the lower portion grades down to
approximately 38 degrees. This upward curving is characteristic of new,
unstable, and active slides. The lower slide area is semi-safe to climb
over due to frictional stabilization of detritus, but the larger rocks
in the upper portion are delicately balanced. Prior to this recent slide
the Redcloud talus slope was not at the maximum angle of repose,
otherwise more than the total additional weight of new slide material
would be carried into the lake.
Distortion and dilation transformed the
dacite slab into fragments ranging from 1,000 cubic feet down to rock
dust. On top of the larger blocks there was loose, fresh rock powder, a
characteristic of very recent, large rock slides. Many hand-sized
fragments appeared integrated and competent, but crumbled easily under
fist pressure. A slickenside appearance is quite obvious on the adjacent
andesite spurs, however none of this resistant rock broke loose.
Amazingly enough, little Castle Rocks remain none the worse for wear, in
spite of much rock battering over them. Small amounts of pumice slide
with the main block, but the remains of this were crushed into dust.
The causes of the larger rock slides
inside the rim are a number of interesting natural processes. Redcloud
Cliff faulted downward on a nearly vertical plane which affords maximum
gravitational pull. Water, directly and indirectly, has helped
disintegration and decomposition within a series of cracks, mostly from
the top downward. Water seeped from Cloudcap dome into tension cracks
near the rim and froze. Seasonal and diurnal temperature changes,
alternate freezing and thawing, greatly accentuated frost wedging, which
can be an effective cause of spawling. Most likely by the middle of July
the ice within the cliff melted sufficiently to hold the rock together
no longer. The rock collapsed after the cementing ice had melted away.
A clayey surface was seen on some of
the larger rock fragments. This suggests the slow decomposition and
decay of the rock itself, or the washing in of volcanic dust, either one
being a function of water and ice. The rock face fractured quite evenly
along semi-columnar joints. No oxidation of iron or water seepages can
be seen. The uniformly light tan of the cliff face indicates hydration
as a mode of decomposition. This process produces a swelling of rock
parts, allowing moisture to penetrate until some decay is effected. In
conclusion, the primary cause was the increasingly powerful action of
frost wedging, and secondarily, the expansion and decay due to
hydration.
The newly exposed cliff remains very
unstable, as well as the talus slope beneath. Fragmental bits are still
constantly falling off. It will be interesting to watch -- from a
distance.