Insights into widespread landsliding in southern Appalachia from Hurricane Helene

GSA Today
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Abstract

Between 23 and 27 September 2024, antecedent rain followed by Hurricane Helene produced one of the most damaging weather events in southern Appalachia history. The back-to-back storm events resulted in a maximum cumulative rainfall of 848 mm and hurricane-force wind gusts over 170 km/h in western North Carolina, eastern Tennessee, and southwestern Virginia. The resulting regional flooding, landslides, and tree blowdown caused over 100 fatalities, damaged or destroyed critical infrastructure and thousands of structures, and severed connectivity across the region. Over the next several weeks, a multi-agency landslide response produced a rapid hazard assessment and mapped 2217 landslides, 55% of which damaged infrastructure or property. Orographic uplift enhanced rainfall, resulting in concentrated landsliding along the ~250 km swath of the Blue Ridge escarpment in western North Carolina. Landslides initiated predominantly on windward-facing (southeast-facing) slopes, and localized clustering of initiation points indicated a strong influence of hillslope-scale meteorological and geomorphic factors. Many shallow landslides mobilized into larger, highly mobile, and damaging debris flows that graded into floods. Here, we put our preliminary observations in the context of historical storm-driven landslide events and open new avenues for investigating the nature and extent of landslides and their effects in southern Appalachia and similar environments.

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Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Insights into widespread landsliding in southern Appalachia from Hurricane Helene
Series title GSA Today
DOI 10.1130/GSATG625A.1
Volume 36
Issue 1
Publication Date January 01, 2026
Year Published 2026
Language English
Publisher Geological Society of America
Contributing office(s) Geologic Hazards Science Center - Landslides / Earthquake Geology
Description 8 p.
First page 4
Last page 11
Country United States
State Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia
Other Geospatial southern Appalachia
Additional publication details