Infographic: How mudslides form after a fire
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Southern California residents in Glendora and other foothill communities were bracing Monday for potential disaster after Sunday's rain-triggered mudslide on Pacific Coast Highway. Here's how hillsides that have been burned by wildfire become prone to flash floods and dangerous mudslides during heavy rains.
Step 1: Fire burns through growth
![](https://latimes-graphics-media.s3.amazonaws.com/interactives/mudslides_after_fire/mudslide_step_1.gif)
Step 2: Rainfall
![](https://latimes-graphics-media.s3.amazonaws.com/interactives/mudslides_after_fire/mudslide_step_2.gif)
Step 3: Mudslide
![](https://latimes-graphics-media.s3.amazonaws.com/interactives/mudslides_after_fire/mudslide_step_3.gif)
Source: University of Idaho, "After the Fires: Hydrophobic Soils" by Randy Brooks