The Mass Movements of Fern Valley

Ohio’s geologic history is tied to the advance and retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Being a state that has been subjected to years of glacial deposition, Ohio has become home to many glacial features like moraines, kames, and eskers. However, thousands of years of erosion since the last glacial...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pedroso Curry, Morgan Antonio
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Open Works 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://openworks.wooster.edu/independentstudy/9604
https://openworks.wooster.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=11990&context=independentstudy
Description
Summary:Ohio’s geologic history is tied to the advance and retreat of the Laurentide Ice Sheet. Being a state that has been subjected to years of glacial deposition, Ohio has become home to many glacial features like moraines, kames, and eskers. However, thousands of years of erosion since the last glacial retreat has created a geomorphic environment in Ohio of incised streams with steep banks. When combined with a continental humid climate and abundant glacial sediments, Ohio becomes very prone to landslides, as the climate allows for freeze-thaw to annually break apart masses of sediment, especially near steeper ravines. In addition, river channels erode at the cut bank, carrying sediment downstream. Landslides come in many forms, being characterized by the sediment size, how the sediment falls and in some cases what the sediment is made of, such as snow or rock. In Holmes County, located in northeastern Ohio, The College of Wooster’s Fern Valley Field Station is a wooded ravine divided by Wilkin’s Run, a meandering river that cuts away at many banks in the valley as it drains into Odell Lake. Upon seeing the topography here, I decided to dig deeper into the history of Fern Valley by analyzing well log data, tracing displaced masses of soil and measuring the change in elevation between Wilkin’s Run to the ridge overlooking the stream through the means of a Trimble GPS. I located a landslide, identified as a rotational slump, along the ravine. The Fern Valley rotational slump shows varied topography from its top bench to Wilkins Run, illustrating a series of horst and grabens where sediment has slipped during movement events through time.