The Lower Greensand is one of the most landslide-susceptible formations in the UK with at least 288 known occurrences in South-East England recorded to the year 2000. Of the formations within the Lower Greensand, the Atherfield Clay is the most prone to landslip. Landslides are occasional, rapid movements of a mass of earth or rock sliding along a steep slope. They tend to occur after sustained heavy rain, when the water saturates overlying rock, making it heavy and liable to slide, others occur via soil creep is a very slow movement, occurring on very gentle slopes because of the way soils repeatedly expand and contract in wet and dry periods. When the soil dries out, it contracts vertically, assisting the soil slowly down a slope. A common geomorphological, chiefly dependent on the
local hydrology such as
hydraulic action, at the base of the Lower Greensand is an escarpment, where the Hythe Beds overlie the Atherfield and Weald Clays, which is particularly susceptible to landslide. Most slip is attributed to massive sandstones overlying weaker shales and clays. The back part of the slip in strongly permeable locations is prone to be straight downward on a rotational slip plane. This shift leaves a steep back face, or back-scar, with a toe raised significantly less. At ‘The Roughs’ in
Kent, where a rotational slump occurred, slips of the
Atherfield Clay (and all material above) have compromised sandstone blocks of
Hythe Beds. Later translational slides have developed along a shear zone at the boundary between the slip material and the undisturbed underlying
Weald Clay. This sort of rotational slip occurs regularly along the coastline between
Hythe and
Folkestone, where the
drainage basin faces inland, exerting a steady force, where the water is subterranean, outward towards the coastal cliffs. == See also ==