Looming, creeping landslide splits home in Wyoming
By MATTHEW BROWN and MEAD GRUVER, Associated Press
Apr 19, 2014 9:08 AM CDT
This aerial image provided by Tributary Environmental shows a home damaged by a landslide Friday, April 18, 2014 in Jackson, Wyo. A slow-moving landslide in Jackson sped up significantly Friday, splitting this house in two, causing a huge uplift in a road and a Walgreens parking lot, and threatening...   (Associated Press)

JACKSON, Wyo. (AP) — A slow-motion disaster is unfolding in the Wyoming resort town of Jackson as a creeping landslide that split a hillside home in half inches toward more houses and businesses below.

The ground beneath the 100-foot hillside has been giving way an inch at a time since the movement was discovered on April 4.

Assistant Town Administrator Roxanne Robinson said by Friday, the rate of movement was doubling every day.

Officials say the hillside is unlikely to suddenly collapse like the March 22 landslide in Oso, Wash., that killed 39 people. But the threat is real and authorities are enforcing an evacuation order in hopes of avoiding injuries.

The area has been graded for roads and businesses in recent years, possibly weakening the hillside and setting the stage for the landslide.

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