creep
creep / krēp/ • v. (past and past part. crept / krept/ ) [intr.] 1. move slowly and carefully, esp. in order to avoid being heard or noticed. ∎ (of a thing) move very slowly at an inexorably steady pace: the fog was creeping up from the marsh. ∎ (of a plant) grow along the ground or other surface by means of extending stems or branches. ∎ (of a plastic solid) undergo gradual deformation under stress.2. (creep in/into) (of an unwanted and negative characteristic or fact) occur or develop gradually and almost imperceptibly. ∎ (creep up) increase slowly but steadily in number or amount.• n. 1. inf. a detestable person. ∎ a person who behaves in an obsequious way in the hope of advancement.2. slow movement, esp. at a steady but almost imperceptible pace. ∎ the tendency of a car with automatic transmission to move when in gear without the accelerator being pressed. ∎ the gradual downward movement of disintegrated rock or soil due to gravitational forces. ∎ the gradual deformation of a plastic solid under stress. ∎ gradual bulging of the floor of a mine owing to pressure on the pillars.PHRASES: give someone the creeps inf. induce a feeling of revulsion or fear in someone.make one's flesh creep feel disgust or revulsion.
Creep
Creep
The slow, often imperceptible downslope movement of soil or other debris is called creep. Because creep moves materials so slowly, it is difficult to discern directly. Observation of the effects of creep, such as bent trees, tilted fences, and cracked walls, usually leads to identification of the problem.
Creep is caused by the interaction of multiple factors, but heaving is likely the most important process. Heaving involves the expansion and contraction of rock fragments, and occurs during cycles of wetting and drying, as well as freezing and thawing. As expansion occurs, particles move outward, perpendicular to the hillside. During contraction, the particles move back toward the hillside, vertically, and end up slightly downslope of where they began. The repeated motion of individual particles results in net downslope movement of the material. Areas that undergo wet/dry or freeze/thaw cycles are most susceptible to creep.
Solifluction is a special type of creep that occurs in cold regions underlain by permafrost . During the winter, the ground freezes right up to the surface. When the surface layer thaws, during the spring and early summer, the meltwater cannot percolate downward into the frozen layers beneath. This causes the surface layer of soil to become waterlogged, facilitating downslope movement as the layer becomes saturated. In this case the surface layer flows, riding above the frozen ground beneath. Although most common in permafrost areas, solifluction can occur anywhere that the surface soil layer becomes saturated.
Although movement associated with creep is slow, it causes significant economic damage because it is a widespread phenomenon that is probably occurring to some extent on virtually all soil-covered slopes. Some of the problem relates to the difficulty of detection. Unless trees, walls, or other built structures are deformed, it is difficult to impossible to determine whether or not creep is occurring. Unfortunately, where creep has been identified, it is also difficult to control. The best response to the problem is to avoid building in areas undergoing creep. Where construction is necessary, buildings should be anchored to bedrock beneath the creeping soil and debris layer.
See also Mass wasting; Regolith; Weathering and weathering series
creep
1. Slow downslope movement of the regolith over hillslopes, due to gravity. The necessary disturbance of the regolith may be due to freezing and thawing; to expansion and contraction (resulting from temperature change or from wetting and drying); to additional weight and lubrication by water; or to the activities of burrowing animals.
2. See CREEP MECHANISMS.
3. The behaviour of minerals under low differential stress over long periods of time. Typically there is an initial stage of transient creep (primary creep) with viscoelastic strains, which changes progressively to a state of purely viscous strain, until the mineral ruptures in a final (tertiary) stage of creep.
creep
1. The slow, downslope movement of the regolith over hill-slopes, caused by gravity. The necessary disturbance of the regolith may be due to freezing and thawing, to expansion and contraction (resulting from temperature change or from wetting and drying), to additional weight and lubrication by water, or to the activities of burrowing animals.
2. See creep mechanisms.