Try GOLD - Free
The Landslide in Your Backyard
Scientific American
|October 2025
As climate change brings more intense rain to the mountains, dangerous debris flows are on the rise

THE LANDSLIDE BEHIND MY NEIGHBOR'S BACKYARD doesn't exist—not according to the New York State landslide map or Greene County's hazard-mitigation plan or the federal inventory managed by the U.S. Geological Survey. But when you're standing in the middle of the debris field, the violence of the event is still evident 14 years after it occurred. The fan of the landslide, where a surge of boulders and mud blasted the forest open after rushing down the steeper slopes of Arizona Mountain in the Catskills, is about 100 feet wide—an undulating plane of rocks, mangled tree trunks, and invasive plants such as Japanese stiltgrass that thrive in disturbed areas.
On a hot July day the seasonal stream that runs through this ravine, named the Shingle Kill, is small enough to step over. When Tropical Storm Irene hovered over these mountains on August 28, 2011, the Shingle Kill swelled like all the otherwise unremarkable streams in the area, frothing downhill in a torrent the color of chocolate milk. This storm was a particularly bad one, dropping up to 18 inches of rain on the northeastern escarpment of the Catskills. Throughout the region explosive rivers eroded their banks, flooding towns and ripping away buildings.
The first house the Shingle Kill passes as it emerges into our community belonged at the time to Diane and Ken Herchenroder, who had lived there for nearly three decades. In the past, when the Shingle Kill occasionally raged, they could hear rocks colliding in the streambed. But this time it was louder—and faster.
This story is from the October 2025 edition of Scientific American.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Scientific American

Scientific American
How a Tiny Brain Region Guides Generosity
Whether and how much we help others may be determined by the brain's basolateral amygdala
6 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Biological Age vs. Chronological Age
Investigating the science and hype of biological age tests
6 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Search Broadly
The way you search the Internet can reinforce your beliefs—without you realizing it
2 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Why Knot
Mathematicians unravel a long-standing conjecture about knot theory
2 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
The Landslide in Your Backyard
As climate change brings more intense rain to the mountains, dangerous debris flows are on the rise
14 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Fast Fashion Needs a Green Makeover
A more circular economy in textiles will look good on everyone
4 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Neural Stretch
Scientists map a mouse's peripheral nervous system in unprecedented detail
2 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
A Block-Stacking Problem with a Preposterous Solution
In principle, this impossible math allows for a glue-free bridge of stacked blocks that can stretch across the Grand Canyon- and into infinity
5 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Decoding Blood
New biomarkers promise easier and earlier detection of Alzheimer's, but the results aren't always clear
9 mins
October 2025

Scientific American
Science Makes the U.S. a Great Nation
History tells us what happens when great nations attack science
4 mins
October 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size