A brief timeline of the Oso mudslide
OSO Here are some key dates related to the Oso landslide and its aftermath.
February 2006. Highway 530 sinks 6 inches along a 250-foot stretch between Arlington and Darrington. The Daily Herald runs a story headlined, Slump in hill may isolate Darrington. It reads: The fear of a big slide was underscored by the massive collapse two weeks ago of a hillside just a mile away that blocked and diverted the Stillaguamish River. Later, it becomes widespread public knowledge that the valley was home to dozens of major landslides over thousands of years.
March 22, 2014. At 10:37 a.m., the deadliest mudslide in U.S. history strikes east of Oso. Highway 530 is blocked. Its estimated the slide contains 19 million tons of earth. Fifteen people are rescued by helicopter. Over the agonizing days and weeks that follow, searchers recover dozens of bodies from the mud.
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July 22. The last mudslide victim, Molly Kris Regelbrugge, is found and identified. Against all odds, the remains of all 43 people killed in the slide were recovered.
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Editorial: Mapping landslide risks honors those lost in Oso
By The Herald Editorial Board
In the 10 years since the Oso landslide struck on a clear Saturday morning along the North Fork of the Stillaguamish River, work on two memorials has continued, honoring the memories of 43 residents of the Steelhead Haven neighborhood who died there, those who survived, the first responders and others who spent months at the site and the valley communities that worked to rebuild after the disaster.
Friday morning at 10:38, a two-acre memorial park off Highway 530 the still-scarred hillside rising above it will be officially dedicated. Among smaller memorials, a steel and bronze pillar rises above a stone and concrete plaza. Five years ago a bronze sculpture of a line of the neighbors mailboxes on Steelhead Drive was dedicated.
A second memorial is more mundane, but just as substantial. This memorial is made of laser measurements, tables of data, geologic history, observations, maps, political will and taxpayer revenue, intended to prevent a similar loss of life in one of the nations more geologically active regions and throughout the United States.
Ten years ago, some 18 million tons of rain-sodden mud, clay, sand and vegetation broke free from the hillside above the Stilly River and Steelhead Haven, burying homes, families, the river and Highway 530 in debris that piled more than 30 feet high in areas. The highway, connecting Arlington and Darrington opened three months later. The body of the last victim wasnt recovered until that July.
https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/editorial-mapping-landslide-risks-honors-those-lost-in-oso/