A massive mud plain cutting north-east made it clear where the water had gone. It had travelled almost 10km overland into a bigger lake. Amazingly, no one had been hurt in this gigantic – was it a mudslide? A flood? Nobody was sure what to call it.

  • excursion22@piefed.ca
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    2 days ago

    Decrease in vegetation by wildfire and logging caused higher melt flows and weakening of soils, eventually leading to soil failure during a spring melt, allowing the lake to drain. Government says it was natural (surprise), locals and scientists disagree.

    • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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      2 days ago

      Sounds like the soil failure taking place was natural under those conditions, but the conditions themselves were not entirely natural. Situations like that make weasel-wording easy.