@article{oai:soar-ir.repo.nii.ac.jp:00011729, author = {Regmi, Amar Deep and Yoshida, Kohki and Dhital, Megh Raj and Devkota, Krishna}, issue = {1}, journal = {LANDSLIDES}, month = {Feb}, note = {The Dumre Besi landslide is one of the largest and most problematic failures on the Mugling-Narayanghat Highway in central Nepal. Though it was triggered by the monsoon rain of 2003, geological structures and rock weathering have played a key role in its initiation and further aggravation. The slide is also controlled to some extent by the groundwater and rugged topography with high slope angles. The landslide zone comprises thinly laminated light grey siltstone with numerous crosscutting quartz veins, grey metasandstone (quartzite), bluish grey to white phyllite, black carbonaceous slate, and dolomite. A thrust fault passes through the centre of the landslide, creating a thick deposit of loose, weathered rock material, and the fault has developed a very thick shattered zone where weathering is very intense. Using field and laboratory analyses, the rocks in the landslide zone can be divided into five zones based on the severity of weathering: none, slight, moderate, severe, and complete. Laboratory analyses showed that the chemically weathered rocks are significantly rich in smectite and vermiculite. Out of these, smectite is the most critical one, as it swells when wet. The formation mechanism of the clay minerals was analysed by various techniques, including X-ray diffraction, X-ray fluorescence, and thin-section analysis, and it was found that most of them were derived from weathering of rock. The clay minerals significantly reduced the rock strength and facilitated the extensive failure of Dumre Besi. The wide fault zone with deeply weathered and clay-rich debris is also responsible for the formation of debris flows in the monsoon season., Article, LANDSLIDES. 10(1):1-13 (2013)}, pages = {1--13}, title = {Effect of rock weathering, clay mineralogy, and geological structures in the formation of large landslide, a case study from Dumre Besei landslide, Lesser Himalaya Nepal}, volume = {10}, year = {2013} }