Ahwiyah Point rockfall

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le_bruce

climber
Oakland: what's not to love?
Mar 31, 2009 - 02:57pm PT

Anyone know if the slide debris reached the popular trail that extends from Mirror? Looks like it.
simply theresa

climber
Yosemite
Mar 31, 2009 - 03:29pm PT
According to the Daily Report, the southern portion of the Mirror Lake loop trail is closed until further notice.
GRJ

climber
Juneau AK
Mar 31, 2009 - 03:47pm PT
I hope they recycled the exploded timber in the middle of, what should be, the wilderness? Californians.... Drag that crap into camp four and let the monkeys have a bonfire!
JEleazarian

Trad climber
Fresno CA
Mar 31, 2009 - 04:08pm PT
The rockfall was significantly north of the death slabs.

All of this makes me wonder, though, just what was so wrong with Camps 7 & 15 (aka the River Campgrounds) -- and whether we tax-paying family campers will ever get our Valley campsites back.

John
yosguns

climber
San Francisco, CA
Apr 1, 2009 - 01:25am PT

Just got this uploaded. Aftershock rock fall from Sunday, 2 PMish.
cleo

Social climber
Berkeley, CA
Apr 1, 2009 - 02:28am PT
whoa, cool aftershock photo!
Mungeclimber

Trad climber
sorry, just posting out loud.
Apr 1, 2009 - 03:08am PT

images taken Sunday afternoon 3/29

Argon

climber
North Bay, CA
Apr 1, 2009 - 05:23am PT
Great pictures! Greg - Was Ahwiyah Point known to be slide prone and were there any advance signs.
drljefe

climber
Old Pueblo, AZ
Apr 1, 2009 - 10:11am PT
rumble, smash, bump
sneville

climber
Apr 1, 2009 - 11:20am PT
Nice picture yosguns, did you get that from dinner ledge?
sean
Peter

Trad climber
San Francisco
Apr 1, 2009 - 11:44am PT
Looks like the rockfall will result in a lot more closures around the valley...

http://www.supertopo.com/climbing/thread.html?topic_id=823427
cleo

Social climber
Berkeley, CA
Apr 1, 2009 - 12:06pm PT
SeismoBlog: http://seismo.berkeley.edu/blogs/seismoblog.php/2009/03/30/

Bursting Rocks and Trembling Earth
The seismic waves of Saturday's rock fall were recorded by many earthquake stations. The 33 depicted here are sorted top to bottom by increasing distance from Yosemite. It takes seismic waves longer to travel further distances, hence the "delay" of almost 60 seconds between the arrivals of the waves at the nearest and most distant stations. (Click for larger image.)

Screenshot of computer program showing seismic waves generated by the Yosemite rockfall, sorted by increasing distance.

While most of the Bay Area was rattled on Monday morning around 10:40 am by a magnitude 4.3 earthquake near Morgan Hill, another earthshaking event went almost unnoticed by the public - unless you were in Yosemite over the weekend. Early Saturday morning, a huge mass of rock came crashing down from Ahwiyah Point near Half Dome. Greg Stock, the Park Geologist at Yosemite, writes that the rocks "fell roughly 1800 feet to the floor of Tenaya Canyon, striking ledges along the way. Debris extended well out into Tenaya Canyon, knocking down hundreds of trees and burying the southern portion of the Mirror Lake loop trail... Fortunately, due to the event occurring in the early morning, there were no injuries."

But what happens when tons and tons of granite come crashing down unto the valley floor? Such an impact makes the ground vibrate and thereby creates seismic waves very similar to the ones being radiated by an earthquake. Indeed, on Saturday morning seismic stations all over Northern California and Nevada - as far away as 250 miles from Yosemite - registered these waves. The automatic earthquake location computer for Northern California at the offices of the USGS in Menlo Park picked up the recordings and calcuated an epicenter just half a mile to the northwest of Half Dome - which is actually pretty close to Ahwiyah Point. The program even computed a magnitude for the rock fall: Its impact had the same energy as a magnitude 2.4 earthquake.

While the seismic waves generated by a rock fall can be mistaken for the rumblings of an earthquake, the physics behind the two phenomena is completely different. Most earthquakes are the result of tectonic stress, which has accumulated in the rocks due to the movement of the lithospheric plates. A rock fall happens when the rock has been weakened by weathering. Water, which accumulates in cracks, freezes during the winter frosts. As ice occupies a larger volume as the same mass of liquid water, the freezing ice makes the rock expand and burst - similiar to a water bottle left in the freezer for too long. If such cycles of freezing and thawing are repeated often enough, the rock becomes loose and can break.

These rock bursts are by no means rare in granite world of Yosemite. Last October two rock falls hit some of the tents and cabins in Curry Village. In July 1996 more than 162,000 tons of rock cascaded down more than 2,000 feet, killing one visitor and crushing 500 trees. This blast was also recorded on many seismic stations, although it was somewhat smaller than Saturday's rock fall. After the 1996 event, BSL's Bob Uhrhammer analysed the seismic data carefully and reconstructed the details of the fall (see http://seismo.berkeley.edu/events_of_interest/yosemite/eoi_yos.html);

corniss chopper

Mountain climber
san jose, ca
Apr 1, 2009 - 01:51pm PT
noticed in the pictures that some of the runoff water is flowing on 'top' of the fresh rockfall debris. I would have thought
it would be quite porous and let the water inside the mass and so be invisible.

Suppose this means that enough of the rockfall was smashed to a fine powder to make a partially waterproof surface for the runoff to stay on the surface?
Interesting.


Clint Cummins

Trad climber
SF Bay area, CA
Apr 1, 2009 - 03:45pm PT
Photo of the release area from halfway up North Dome, June 2007:

enjoimx

Big Wall climber
SLO Cal
Apr 1, 2009 - 03:57pm PT
Reply to Dr. Sprock

1. You cant break the sound barrier unless some force beyond the force of gravity is involved. Rockfall doesnt break the sound barrier, unless someone attaches a rocket to the rock and blasts it downward.

2. A rockfal wont reach terminal velocity (usually) because it is sliding down the mountain, hence friction

3. Does a peice of lead fall faster than a feather in a non-air resistant environment? No. Neither does a large rock fall faster than a small rock.

Sure you're a Dr.?
jsb

Trad climber
Bay area
Apr 1, 2009 - 09:41pm PT
Does anybody know if this type of thing is usually seasonal... at least in Yosemite? (i.e. maybe melting ice or the thaw/freeze cycle is responsible for a lot of it?)

I know there was a lot of rockfall on Glacier Point Apron a long time ago... also near Rixon's Pinnacle. Were these in the springtime as well, by any chance?
Dr.Sprock

Boulder climber
Sprocketville
Apr 1, 2009 - 10:19pm PT
1) rocks do break the sound barrier
2)rocks can fall from the top of el cappy and never encounter wall friction
3)free falling rocks will have different impact velocities depending on shape, size and density

no, i am not a doctor, i'm a homo...

Reilly

Mountain climber
Monrovia, CA
Apr 1, 2009 - 11:01pm PT
"rocks do break the sound barrier"

I forgot it is April 1st.

Reminds me of the argument I had with somebody about raising the Kursk submarine from its watery grave. He maintained it didn't weigh 18,000 tons because it was underwater. Right, gravity doesn't work underwater, does it?
hobo

climber
PDX
Apr 1, 2009 - 11:19pm PT
Dr, what is wall friction?
Dr.Sprock

Boulder climber
Sprocketville
Apr 1, 2009 - 11:29pm PT
wall friction is what you get as your colon gets scraped by a wall burger not chased with enuff PBR.

Here is how you break the sound barrier with rocks:

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