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2006 Southern Leyte mudslide

On February 17, 2006, a massive rock slide-debris avalanche occurred in the Philippine province of Southern Leyte, causing widespread damage and loss of life. The deadly landslide (or debris flow) followed a 10-day period of heavy rain and a minor earthquake (magnitude 2.6 on the Richter scale). The official death toll was 1,126.[1]

2006 Southern Leyte mudslide
View of the Southern Leyte rockslide-debris avalanche toe
DateFebruary 17, 2006 (2006-02-17)
Time10:30 UTC+08:00
LocationGuinsaugon, Saint Bernard, Southern Leyte, Philippines
Coordinates10°20′15″N 125°05′51″E / 10.33750°N 125.09750°E / 10.33750; 125.09750Coordinates: 10°20′15″N 125°05′51″E / 10.33750°N 125.09750°E / 10.33750; 125.09750
Deaths1,126
View of the Southern Leyte rockslide-debris avalanche body from the landslide crown. Distance to the toe is approximately 4 km.
Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) on NASA's Terra satellite with this view of the landslide that buried a town.

Overview

At around 10:30 on February 17, 2006, a cliff face of a ridge straddling the Philippine Fault collapsed in a combination rockslide-debris mass movement event, translocating and subsequently burying Guinsaugon village in the township of Saint Bernard.[2] Up to ten smaller landslides had occurred within the previous week in the vicinity of St. Bernard, but Guinsaugon was the worst-hit community.[citation needed]

Among the worst of the tragedies was the burial of the local elementary school, located nearest to the mountain ridge, as the landslide occurred when school was in session and full of children. Provincial Governor Rosette Lerias said at the time the school had 246 students and seven teachers; only a child and an adult were rescued immediately after the disaster transpired. About 80 women who participated in the celebration of the fifth anniversary of the Guinsaugon Women's Health Association were also lost in the landslide.[3]

Lerias said that although several residents had left the area the week before due to the fear of landslides, several of them had returned when the rains had eased.[citation needed]

Rescue and relief

Rescue teams including military personnel proceeded to the affected areas.[citation needed] However, relief efforts were hampered by rain, chest-deep mud, roads blocked by boulders, washed-out bridges, and lack of heavy equipment.[citation needed] A minor earthquake in the morning of February 17 also affected the relief operation as the ground remained unstable.[citation needed]

President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo gave an address on television stating that "help is on the way". Navy and coast guard ships were dispatched to the coastal area.[4]

On February 17, Philippine National Red Cross chairman Richard J. Gordon who was then in Geneva, Switzerland, attending a board meeting of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement appealed for international assistance. He raised US$1.5 million to help the victims of the mudslides. The funds were used to purchase tents, blankets, cooking utensils, mosquito nets, temporary shelter materials, hygiene articles, water purification tablets and medicines. US$152,000 was released to provide initial assistance. A relief plane was flown into the region carrying emergency trauma kits, rubber boots, ropes, clothing, flashlights and medicine. Three Philippines National Red Cross teams with search and rescue dogs were at the site to provide assistance, with others joining soon afterward.[5] The Red Cross said that it feared that the death toll would be high.[4]

The United States sent three naval vessels, the USS Curtis Wilbur, USS Essex, and USS Harpers Ferry with the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, to the area to provide assistance.[6]

About 6,000 U.S. Army and Marine Corps troops were in the Philippines for an annual bilateral exercise.[7] The US government also donated $100,000 worth of disaster equipment to the Philippine National Red Cross. USAID turned over 29 million pesos (about $560,000) worth of food and non-food items.[8]

Other countries donated or pledged assistance to the Philippine government.[citation needed] China offered a donation of $1 million in cash and material.[citation needed] Australia also offered AU$1 million ($740,000) in immediate relief.[citation needed] Taiwan pledged enough medicine to treat 3,000 people for a month and a half along with $100,000.[citation needed] Thailand also pledged $1 million.[citation needed] Malaysia sent a 60-man search-and-rescue and medical assistance team, the Special Malaysia Disaster Assistance Team (SMART).[citation needed] Spain, through a non-government organization, the Unidad Canina de Rescate y Salvamento, sent a six-man rescue team equipped with five sniffer dogs to aid in the relief and rescue efforts.[8] South Korea promised $1 million. New Zealand sent $133,000 to be used in future rescue operations. Singapore said, according to a statement from Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, that officials would help the Arroyo administration in any way possible. Indonesia and Turkey offered humanitarian contingents as well.

The Philippine National Red Cross reported that 53 persons were rescued from the mud on February 17, but the rescue efforts had to be suspended at nightfall for safety reasons.[7]

Possible causes

Philippine congressman Roger Mercado of Southern Leyte claimed in a Reuters interview that logging and mining done in the area three decades ago was the main culprit.[9] Dave Petley, professor at the International Landslide Centre, Durham University, told the BBC that the causes Congressman Mercado mentioned, if proven true, created a "dangerous combination" that produced a "classic landslide scenario".[10]

However, local government officials and eyewitnesses claimed anecdotally that the area was "well forested" and the governor's office said that deforestation from mining and logging activities were not the causal factor, although no scientific evidence was presented to back the claims. The governors office did not explain why the soil was so unstable at the time of the slide, after millennia of stability.[10]

Experts did agree that torrential rains lasting two weeks before the mudslide were the tipping point that precipitated the disaster. Rainfall amounting to nearly 1,200 millimetres (47 in) over the period of February 4–14[11] loosened the soil so much that the resulting sludge and rocks thundered down the slopes of nearby Mount Can-abag, virtually disintegrating it. The La Niña weather phenomenon was blamed for the non-stop rains that occurred in the province, as well as in the Caraga region, which is due south of Leyte.[10] San Francisco, Agusan del Sur mayor Carie Ladernora declared the state of calamity on her town by February 12, 2006.[12]

The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology recorded a magnitude 2.6 earthquake in Southern Leyte just prior to the landslide although the effects of this are unclear.[10]

2008 workshop

After two years, the international geoscience community including experts from Japan, Canada, United States, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, Hong Kong, UK, Taiwan and the Philippines, came together in Tacloban and St. Bernard to examine known information on the Guinsaugon disaster. In addition, the workshop was tasked with determining the next steps as Leyte and the Philippines move forward from the world's deadliest single-event landslide since 1998. The landslide is classified as a rock slide-debris avalanche using the Varnes (1978)[13] or Cruden and Varnes (1996)[14] classification. Volume estimates in recent publications range between 14 MCM (million cubic metres) and 20 MCM, converging on or about 15 MCM.[15][16][17][18][19] There is general accord among scientists that high precipitation a week prior to the failure contributed to the conditions at failure, but the 5 day delay between the rain and the landslide, and the fact that Southern Leyte regularly gets high overall levels of precipitation means that the precise nature of that contribution is unknown. Similarly, the role of minor ground shaking that occurred at about the same time is still uncertain. "Was the landslide caused by ground shaking or excessive rain? This is one of the things that is not yet resolved." said Dr. Mark Albert Zarco, a professor at the Department of Engineering Sciences, University of the Philippines Diliman in a news story. Importantly, the geological and geomorphological history of the slope including, for example, the prominent strike-slip movement of about 2.5 cm per year, has ultimately lead to failures all along the scarp, including the one that buried Guinsaugon. Richard Guthrie, of University of Waterloo, Canada, stated: "We have had very large rains and we have had very large earthquakes in the past; The rocks have been stretched and strained. As time moves on, the rock begins to age and die and finally it collapses. The important thing is that we’re able to know the preconditioning of the slopes."[20] Scientists are currently building a synthesis paper on the landslide and a set of recommendations regarding the next steps for the Philippines in relation to landslide hazards. There was also a minor earthquake in the area measuring 2.6 which would have contributed to the landslide.

May 2006 mudslide

Due to Typhoon Chanchu (Philippine name: Caloy), flash floods and mudslides isolated at least 11 barangays in Sogod, Southern Leyte. No casualties were reported.[21]

In popular culture

Footage taken during helicopter rescues after the mudslide was featured in an episode of the American reality television series, World's Most Amazing Videos.[citation needed]

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ "Philippine Landslide and Flood Operations Update #7" August 7, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, red, Red Cross, Appeal #MDRPH00107, update August 7, 31, 2007
  2. ^ "Disaster Relief: Too Late, Earth Scans Reveal the Power of a Killer Landslide", Science Magazine, March 31, 2006
  3. ^ "80 Abanse! Pinay members still missing in Guinsaugon" August 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, Philippine Daily Inquirer, February 22, 2006
  4. ^ a b "Hundreds feared dead in Philippine mudslide", Reuters, February 17, 2006
  5. ^ "Red Cross seeks $1.5 mln for Philippine mudslide", Reuters, February 17, 2006
  6. ^ "USS Essex, USS Harpers Ferry and USS Curtis Wilbur Arrive on Station to Help Philippine Mudslide Victims"
  7. ^ a b No Signs of Life' after Huge Mudslide hits Philippines September 28, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Pakistan Times
  8. ^ a b Landslide triggers avalanche of international aid, The Inquirer, February 19, 2006
  9. ^ Hundreds feared dead in Philippine mudslide[dead link], Reuters, February 17, 2006
  10. ^ a b c d "What caused Philippines landslide?", BBC, February 17, 2006
  11. ^ Lagmay, Alfredo Mahar A; Ong, John Burtkenley T; Fernandez, Dan Ferdinand D; et al. (2006). "Scientists investigate recent Philippine landslide". Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union. 87 (12): 121. Bibcode:2006EOSTr..87..121L. doi:10.1029/2006EO120001.
  12. ^ "Leyte Mudslide: CDRC Report on St. Bernard" (Microsoft Word). Citizens' Disaster Response Center. Retrieved February 15, 2018.
  13. ^ Varnes D. J.: Slope movement types and processes. In: Schuster R. L. & Krizek R. J. Ed., Landslides, analysis and control. Transportation Research Board Sp. Rep. No. 176, Nat. Acad. oi Sciences, pp. 11–33, 1978.
  14. ^ Cruden D.M., VARNES D. J. (1996) – Landslide types and processes. In: Turner A.K.; Shuster R.L. (eds) Landslides: Investigation and Mitigation. Transp Res Board, Spec Rep 247, pp 36–75.
  15. ^ Catane, Sandra G.; Cabria, Hillel B.; Zarco, Mark Albert H.; Saturay, Ricarido M.; Mirasol-Robert, Aileen A. (2008). "The 17 February 2006 Guinsaugon rock slide-debris avalanche, Southern Leyte, Philippines: deposit characteristics and failure mechanism". Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment. 67 (3): 305. doi:10.1007/s10064-008-0120-y. S2CID 128915964.
  16. ^ Catane,S.G., Cabria, H.B., Tomarong, C.P., Saturay, R.M., Zarco, M.A.H. and Pioquinto, W.C. 2007. Catastrophic rockslide-debris avalanche at St. Bernard, Southern Leyte, Philippines. Landslides, 4.
  17. ^ Evans, S.G., Guthrie, R.H., Roberts, N.J., and Bishop, N.F. 2007. The disastrous February 17, 2006, rockslide-debris avalanche on Leyte Island, Philippines: a catastrophic landslide in tropical mountain terrain. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 7, 89 – 101.
  18. ^ Orense, R.P. and Sapuay, S.E. 2006. Preliminary report on February 17, 2006, Leyte Philippines landslide. Soils and Foundations, 45, 685–693.
  19. ^ Makino, M., Mandanas, A.A. and Catane, S.G. 2007. Gravity basement of the Guinsaugon landslide along the Philippine Fault Zone. Earth Planets Space, 59, 1067 – 1071.
  20. ^ www.gmanews.tv, Scientists clueless on cause of Southern Leyte landslide
  21. ^ Storm triggers landslides; thousands stranded, INQ7.net, May 12, 2006

Sources

  • A.M.F. Lagmay, J. B. T. Ong, D.F.D. Fernandez, M. R. Lapus, R. S. Rodolfo, A. M. P. Tengonciang, J.L.A. Soria, E. G. Baliatan, Z. L. Quimba, C. L. Uichanco, E. M. R. Paguican, A. R. C. Remedio, G.R.H. Lorenzo, W. Valdivia, and F. B. Avila (2006) "Scientists investigate recent Philippine Landslide". EOS vol 87 no. 12, pp. 121–124.
  • Lagmay, A.M.F., Raymond S. Rodolfo, Arlene Mae P. Tengonciang, Janneli Lea T. Soria, John Burtkenley T. Ong, Dan Ferdinand D. Fernandez, Mark R.Lapus, Eden G. Baliatan, Zareth P. Quimba, Christopher L. Uichanco, Engielle R. Paguican (2008) "Science guides search and rescue after the 2006 Philippine landslide" Journal of Disasters. doi:10.1111/j.1467-7717.2008.01047.x vol.32(3): 416–33.

External links

  • 1500 Missing in Village Mudslide – CBC Dean Bernardo February 17, 2006
  • Philippine rescuers find bodies – BBC News February 19, 2006
  • Philippine rescue teams find more bodies – MSNBC February 19, 2006
  • Hope fades for villagers in Philippine mudslide horror – The Observer John Aglionby, February 19, 2006
  • Mud wipes out Philippines village – BBC News February 17, 2006
  • What caused Philippines landslide? – BBC News February 17, 2006

2006, southern, leyte, mudslide, february, 2006, massive, rock, slide, debris, avalanche, occurred, philippine, province, southern, leyte, causing, widespread, damage, loss, life, deadly, landslide, debris, flow, followed, period, heavy, rain, minor, earthquak. On February 17 2006 a massive rock slide debris avalanche occurred in the Philippine province of Southern Leyte causing widespread damage and loss of life The deadly landslide or debris flow followed a 10 day period of heavy rain and a minor earthquake magnitude 2 6 on the Richter scale The official death toll was 1 126 1 2006 Southern Leyte mudslideView of the Southern Leyte rockslide debris avalanche toeDateFebruary 17 2006 2006 02 17 Time10 30 UTC 08 00LocationGuinsaugon Saint Bernard Southern Leyte PhilippinesCoordinates10 20 15 N 125 05 51 E 10 33750 N 125 09750 E 10 33750 125 09750 Coordinates 10 20 15 N 125 05 51 E 10 33750 N 125 09750 E 10 33750 125 09750Deaths1 126View of the Southern Leyte rockslide debris avalanche body from the landslide crown Distance to the toe is approximately 4 km Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer ASTER on NASA s Terra satellite with this view of the landslide that buried a town Contents 1 Overview 2 Rescue and relief 3 Possible causes 3 1 2008 workshop 4 May 2006 mudslide 5 In popular culture 6 See also 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 External linksOverview EditAt around 10 30 on February 17 2006 a cliff face of a ridge straddling the Philippine Fault collapsed in a combination rockslide debris mass movement event translocating and subsequently burying Guinsaugon village in the township of Saint Bernard 2 Up to ten smaller landslides had occurred within the previous week in the vicinity of St Bernard but Guinsaugon was the worst hit community citation needed Among the worst of the tragedies was the burial of the local elementary school located nearest to the mountain ridge as the landslide occurred when school was in session and full of children Provincial Governor Rosette Lerias said at the time the school had 246 students and seven teachers only a child and an adult were rescued immediately after the disaster transpired About 80 women who participated in the celebration of the fifth anniversary of the Guinsaugon Women s Health Association were also lost in the landslide 3 Lerias said that although several residents had left the area the week before due to the fear of landslides several of them had returned when the rains had eased citation needed Rescue and relief EditRescue teams including military personnel proceeded to the affected areas citation needed However relief efforts were hampered by rain chest deep mud roads blocked by boulders washed out bridges and lack of heavy equipment citation needed A minor earthquake in the morning of February 17 also affected the relief operation as the ground remained unstable citation needed President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo gave an address on television stating that help is on the way Navy and coast guard ships were dispatched to the coastal area 4 On February 17 Philippine National Red Cross chairman Richard J Gordon who was then in Geneva Switzerland attending a board meeting of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement appealed for international assistance He raised US 1 5 million to help the victims of the mudslides The funds were used to purchase tents blankets cooking utensils mosquito nets temporary shelter materials hygiene articles water purification tablets and medicines US 152 000 was released to provide initial assistance A relief plane was flown into the region carrying emergency trauma kits rubber boots ropes clothing flashlights and medicine Three Philippines National Red Cross teams with search and rescue dogs were at the site to provide assistance with others joining soon afterward 5 The Red Cross said that it feared that the death toll would be high 4 The United States sent three naval vessels the USS Curtis Wilbur USS Essex and USS Harpers Ferry with the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit to the area to provide assistance 6 About 6 000 U S Army and Marine Corps troops were in the Philippines for an annual bilateral exercise 7 The US government also donated 100 000 worth of disaster equipment to the Philippine National Red Cross USAID turned over 29 million pesos about 560 000 worth of food and non food items 8 Other countries donated or pledged assistance to the Philippine government citation needed China offered a donation of 1 million in cash and material citation needed Australia also offered AU 1 million 740 000 in immediate relief citation needed Taiwan pledged enough medicine to treat 3 000 people for a month and a half along with 100 000 citation needed Thailand also pledged 1 million citation needed Malaysia sent a 60 man search and rescue and medical assistance team the Special Malaysia Disaster Assistance Team SMART citation needed Spain through a non government organization the Unidad Canina de Rescate y Salvamento sent a six man rescue team equipped with five sniffer dogs to aid in the relief and rescue efforts 8 South Korea promised 1 million New Zealand sent 133 000 to be used in future rescue operations Singapore said according to a statement from Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong that officials would help the Arroyo administration in any way possible Indonesia and Turkey offered humanitarian contingents as well The Philippine National Red Cross reported that 53 persons were rescued from the mud on February 17 but the rescue efforts had to be suspended at nightfall for safety reasons 7 Possible causes EditPhilippine congressman Roger Mercado of Southern Leyte claimed in a Reuters interview that logging and mining done in the area three decades ago was the main culprit 9 Dave Petley professor at the International Landslide Centre Durham University told the BBC that the causes Congressman Mercado mentioned if proven true created a dangerous combination that produced a classic landslide scenario 10 However local government officials and eyewitnesses claimed anecdotally that the area was well forested and the governor s office said that deforestation from mining and logging activities were not the causal factor although no scientific evidence was presented to back the claims The governors office did not explain why the soil was so unstable at the time of the slide after millennia of stability 10 Experts did agree that torrential rains lasting two weeks before the mudslide were the tipping point that precipitated the disaster Rainfall amounting to nearly 1 200 millimetres 47 in over the period of February 4 14 11 loosened the soil so much that the resulting sludge and rocks thundered down the slopes of nearby Mount Can abag virtually disintegrating it The La Nina weather phenomenon was blamed for the non stop rains that occurred in the province as well as in the Caraga region which is due south of Leyte 10 San Francisco Agusan del Sur mayor Carie Ladernora declared the state of calamity on her town by February 12 2006 12 The Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology recorded a magnitude 2 6 earthquake in Southern Leyte just prior to the landslide although the effects of this are unclear 10 2008 workshop Edit After two years the international geoscience community including experts from Japan Canada United States Sri Lanka New Zealand Hong Kong UK Taiwan and the Philippines came together in Tacloban and St Bernard to examine known information on the Guinsaugon disaster In addition the workshop was tasked with determining the next steps as Leyte and the Philippines move forward from the world s deadliest single event landslide since 1998 The landslide is classified as a rock slide debris avalanche using the Varnes 1978 13 or Cruden and Varnes 1996 14 classification Volume estimates in recent publications range between 14 MCM million cubic metres and 20 MCM converging on or about 15 MCM 15 16 17 18 19 There is general accord among scientists that high precipitation a week prior to the failure contributed to the conditions at failure but the 5 day delay between the rain and the landslide and the fact that Southern Leyte regularly gets high overall levels of precipitation means that the precise nature of that contribution is unknown Similarly the role of minor ground shaking that occurred at about the same time is still uncertain Was the landslide caused by ground shaking or excessive rain This is one of the things that is not yet resolved said Dr Mark Albert Zarco a professor at the Department of Engineering Sciences University of the Philippines Diliman in a news story Importantly the geological and geomorphological history of the slope including for example the prominent strike slip movement of about 2 5 cm per year has ultimately lead to failures all along the scarp including the one that buried Guinsaugon Richard Guthrie of University of Waterloo Canada stated We have had very large rains and we have had very large earthquakes in the past The rocks have been stretched and strained As time moves on the rock begins to age and die and finally it collapses The important thing is that we re able to know the preconditioning of the slopes 20 Scientists are currently building a synthesis paper on the landslide and a set of recommendations regarding the next steps for the Philippines in relation to landslide hazards There was also a minor earthquake in the area measuring 2 6 which would have contributed to the landslide May 2006 mudslide EditDue to Typhoon Chanchu Philippine name Caloy flash floods and mudslides isolated at least 11 barangays in Sogod Southern Leyte No casualties were reported 21 In popular culture EditFootage taken during helicopter rescues after the mudslide was featured in an episode of the American reality television series World s Most Amazing Videos citation needed See also Edit Philippines portalList of landslides Tropical Storm Thelma Uring 1991 Typhoon Haiyan Yolanda 2013 References EditCitations Edit Philippine Landslide and Flood Operations Update 7 Archived August 7 2009 at the Wayback Machine red Red Cross Appeal MDRPH00107 update August 7 31 2007 Disaster Relief Too Late Earth Scans Reveal the Power of a Killer Landslide Science Magazine March 31 2006 80 Abanse Pinay members still missing in Guinsaugon Archived August 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine Philippine Daily Inquirer February 22 2006 a b Hundreds feared dead in Philippine mudslide Reuters February 17 2006 Red Cross seeks 1 5 mln for Philippine mudslide Reuters February 17 2006 USS Essex USS Harpers Ferry and USS Curtis Wilbur Arrive on Station to Help Philippine Mudslide Victims a b No Signs of Life after Huge Mudslide hits Philippines Archived September 28 2007 at the Wayback Machine Pakistan Times a b Landslide triggers avalanche of international aid The Inquirer February 19 2006 Hundreds feared dead in Philippine mudslide dead link Reuters February 17 2006 a b c d What caused Philippines landslide BBC February 17 2006 Lagmay Alfredo Mahar A Ong John Burtkenley T Fernandez Dan Ferdinand D et al 2006 Scientists investigate recent Philippine landslide Eos Transactions American Geophysical Union 87 12 121 Bibcode 2006EOSTr 87 121L doi 10 1029 2006EO120001 Leyte Mudslide CDRC Report on St Bernard Microsoft Word Citizens Disaster Response Center Retrieved February 15 2018 Varnes D J Slope movement types and processes In Schuster R L amp Krizek R J Ed Landslides analysis and control Transportation Research Board Sp Rep No 176 Nat Acad oi Sciences pp 11 33 1978 Cruden D M VARNES D J 1996 Landslide types and processes In Turner A K Shuster R L eds Landslides Investigation and Mitigation Transp Res Board Spec Rep 247 pp 36 75 Catane Sandra G Cabria Hillel B Zarco Mark Albert H Saturay Ricarido M Mirasol Robert Aileen A 2008 The 17 February 2006 Guinsaugon rock slide debris avalanche Southern Leyte Philippines deposit characteristics and failure mechanism Bulletin of Engineering Geology and the Environment 67 3 305 doi 10 1007 s10064 008 0120 y S2CID 128915964 Catane S G Cabria H B Tomarong C P Saturay R M Zarco M A H and Pioquinto W C 2007 Catastrophic rockslide debris avalanche at St Bernard Southern Leyte Philippines Landslides 4 Evans S G Guthrie R H Roberts N J and Bishop N F 2007 The disastrous February 17 2006 rockslide debris avalanche on Leyte Island Philippines a catastrophic landslide in tropical mountain terrain Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 7 89 101 Orense R P and Sapuay S E 2006 Preliminary report on February 17 2006 Leyte Philippines landslide Soils and Foundations 45 685 693 Makino M Mandanas A A and Catane S G 2007 Gravity basement of the Guinsaugon landslide along the Philippine Fault Zone Earth Planets Space 59 1067 1071 www gmanews tv Scientists clueless on cause of Southern Leyte landslide Storm triggers landslides thousands stranded INQ7 net May 12 2006 Sources Edit A M F Lagmay J B T Ong D F D Fernandez M R Lapus R S Rodolfo A M P Tengonciang J L A Soria E G Baliatan Z L Quimba C L Uichanco E M R Paguican A R C Remedio G R H Lorenzo W Valdivia and F B Avila 2006 Scientists investigate recent Philippine Landslide EOS vol 87 no 12 pp 121 124 Lagmay A M F Raymond S Rodolfo Arlene Mae P Tengonciang Janneli Lea T Soria John Burtkenley T Ong Dan Ferdinand D Fernandez Mark R Lapus Eden G Baliatan Zareth P Quimba Christopher L Uichanco Engielle R Paguican 2008 Science guides search and rescue after the 2006 Philippine landslide Journal of Disasters doi 10 1111 j 1467 7717 2008 01047 x vol 32 3 416 33 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2006 Southern Leyte mudslide 1500 Missing in Village Mudslide CBC Dean Bernardo February 17 2006 Philippine rescuers find bodies BBC News February 19 2006 Philippine rescue teams find more bodies MSNBC February 19 2006 Hope fades for villagers in Philippine mudslide horror The Observer John Aglionby February 19 2006 Mud wipes out Philippines village BBC News February 17 2006 What caused Philippines landslide BBC News February 17 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 2006 Southern Leyte mudslide amp oldid 1139856011, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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