thumb|Garland-like solifluction formed in the Swiss National Park thumb|Possible solifluction lobes in Acidalia Planitia on Mars as seen by [[HiRISE]] thumb|Solifluction sheets near Eagle Summit (Alaska)|Eagle Summit, [[Alaska]] Solifluction is a collective name for gradual processes in which a mass moves down a slope ("mass wasting") related to freeze-thaw activity. This is the standard modern meaning of solifluction, which differs from the original meaning given to it by Johan Gunnar Andersson in 1906.
thumb|Garland-like solifluction formed in the Swiss National Park thumb|Possible solifluction lobes in Acidalia Planitia on Mars as seen by [[HiRISE]] thumb|Solifluction sheets near Eagle Summit (Alaska)|Eagle Summit, [[Alaska]] Solifluction is a collective name for gradual processes in which a mass moves down a slope ("mass wasting") related to freeze-thaw activity. This is the standard modern meaning of solifluction, which differs from the original meaning given to it by Johan Gunnar Andersson in 1906.
==Origin and evolution of the concept== In the original sense it meant the movement of waste saturated in water found in periglacial regions. However it was later discovered that various slow waste movements in periglacial regions did not require saturation in water, but were rather associated to freeze-thaw processes. The term solifluction was appropriated to refer to these slow processes, and therefore excludes rapid periglacial movements. In slow periglacial solifluction there are not clear gliding planes, and therefore skinflows and active layer detachments are not included in the concept. On the other hand, movement of waste saturated in water can occur in any humid climate, and therefore this kind of solifluction is not restricted to cold climates.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).