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HomeNewsSCIENTISTS PREDICTED MASSIVE SILETZ R. LANDSLIDE

SCIENTISTS PREDICTED MASSIVE SILETZ R. LANDSLIDE

Rains Triggered Slide That Took Out Hwy. 229, 5 Houses

SILETZ — A “massive” landslide 10 miles north of Siletz and five miles due east of Depoe Bay Friday, Dec. 12, that swept a quarter-mile of Hwy. 229 into the Siletz River was predicted by scientists five years ago.

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FRIDAY’S LANDSLIDE — right down to the location — was predicted by researchers five years ago in the journal “Science Advances.” The study area, above, includes the Lincoln City-Depoe Bay-Siletz “triangle.”

The Oregon Dept. of Transportation said the event, located around, MP 14 was reported about 8:45 a.m. The slide destroyed or heavily damaged as many as five homes, leaving five homeless but uninjured with some in the care of the Lincoln Co. Red Cross.

Incredibly, the event — right down to the location — was predicted by researchers five years ago in the journal “Science Advances.” In a paper entitled, “Rainfall triggers more deep-seated landslides than Cascadia earthquakes in the Oregon Coast Range, USA,” the authors studied evidence of nearly 10,000 landslides in exactly the same area of Friday’s landslide. Their conclusion: “most of those events in the Oregon Coast Range were triggered by rainfall.”

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A HOUSE (right) was narrowly missed by Friday’s landslide, while a vehicle can be seen peeking out of the debris (center). (Landslide photos courtesy of ODOT)

They wrote, “Historic deep-seated landslides include a failure that occurred after days of heavy rain in 1975, damming Drift Creek and creating a lake that persists today.”

Records of the National Weather Service (See Beacon ‘Weather’ section) indicate that nearly two inches of rain fell in the Lincoln City-Depoe Bay-Siletz triangle between 3 a.m. Wednesday, Dec. 10, and 5 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 11, an amount that meets the definition of “heavy rain” capable of flooding and overwhelming natural drainage systems. While Lincoln County has received about 60 inches of rain to date in 2025, areas further inland have seen significantly higher totals, reaching up to 79.98 inches so far.

Finger-pointing has already started, with some blaming the logging industry. The landslide, according to ODOT, started on Weyerhauser-owned property. But an Oregon State University professor of forestry, Arne Skaugset, said it’s not that simple.

“Most people who have not studied this issue assume that any landslide that occurs in a harvested unit is caused by logging, and that’s all there is to it,” said Skaugset. “This is not true.”

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THE SILETZ RIVER was muddied by a landslide at MP 14 early Friday morning that swept away five homes.

The problem, experts say, began millions of years ago when what is now the Coast Range was the ocean floor – mostly sandstone with inter-bedded siltstone and mudstone. If you fast-forward millions of years, those ocean floor sediments have been uplifted by geologic forces to form steep Coast Range mountains that are typified by soils of varying depth, sometimes as shallow as only a few feet deep. Water soaks through the soils, hits a less permeable layer and runs along it until it surfaces, forming natural seeps where water accumulates. Then – given the steepness of the land – the heavy, saturated soil slides.

“Erosion has always happened in the Coast Range, and landslides are the primary cause of it,” Skaugset said. “Most of the time, it has nothing to do with land management.”

Despite the damage, ODOT officials say they were not caught off guard. Spokesperson Mindy McCartt claimed road crews had been watching Hwy. 229 during heavy rainstorms in the days prior to the slide, checking sunken grades, patching cracks and flying drones over suspect areas.

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HWY. 229 HAS BEEN CLOSED indefinitely, with no date on reopening. It could take “days, weeks or months” to fix the key road, according to highway officials.

“Landslides in the Pacific Northwest Coast Range are natural and common, mostly due to the geology and climate,” OSU’s Skaugset said. “They have always occurred and always will.”

Meanwhile, Hwy. 229 has been closed indefinitely at the site, with no date predicted for reopening. It could take “days, weeks or months” to fix the key road, according to highway officials.

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Rick Beasley
Rick Beasleyhttps://boilerbaybeacon.com
Rick Beasley, a veteran newsman with more than two-dozen important journalism awards to his credit, is co-publisher and reporter at Boiler Bay Beacon. As an internet newspaper, the Beacon is a glove-like fit to Beasley’s background as a crusading reporter whose only goal is to keep the presses greased with advertising in order to bring you, the reader, astonishing stories and photos you won’t find anywhere else. Contact Rick at [email protected] for ads or with your story ideas.

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COMMENTS

1 COMMENT

  1. Recent (1 and 2 years old) aerial photos of mile 14 slide area show a are soil crack at ridge top and some truck drivers on 229 had commented that crack was visible last summer.

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