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Transport Laws and Geomorphic Form
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Atacama Desert Columbia Hills Some of these slides are from Dietrich’s AGU talk (full video linked on the class notes page or available at http://www.agu.org/webcast/fm08/presentations/langbein/) Similarity of Form
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Conservation Equations Mass conservation U: uplift, E: Erosion, q s : sediment tranport (Dietrich eq 4) A full understanding of geomorphic form requires transport laws and specification of sediment production rates.
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Also see discussion of Kirkby p. 25
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Transport Law of Gophers on Hillslopes Initial diffusive approximation is improved by adding in the effects of ‘friction’ a nonlinear transport law. (Dietrich p. 13)
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TRANSPORT LIMITED Ample debris supply S ~ C = D h - z/ t = C/ x NOTATION S = Actual sediment transport (per unit flow width L 2 T -1 ) C = Sediment Transporting Capacity (per unit flow width L 2 T-1) D = Detachment rate from channel bed (LT -1 ) z = elevation; x = horizontal distance (1-D); t= time elapsed EROSION LIMITED Above are two limiting cases of a continuum - z/ t = S/ x dS/dx = D – S/h Tends to Transport-Limited as h 0; to Supply Limited as h (In Kirkby 1971 notation, k=1/h). SUPPLY LIMITED Debris limited by detachment/ weathering S << C - z/ t = D ‘Special’ Cases (described by Kirkby {after GK Gilbert}): Here notation is simplified to 1 spatial dimension Slide from Kirkby and Wilgoose, 2005 IAG presentation
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Transport limited: Transport capacity (q s ) is insufficient to overcome soil production rate (weathering, P) –E.g.,‘rounded hillslopes’; soil-mantled surfaces. As is the general rule, different processes (forms of the transport law) predict different surface expressions: ‘Special’ Cases (described by Kirkby {after GK Gilbert})
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Weathering limited: Soil production P is the limiting factor in dz/dt. Bedrock typically is exposed. On Earth, weathering and hence soil/sediment production rates couple strongly to sediment thickness (h) (Dietrich p 14- 16). On weathering limited slopes, the form of the slope can be a strong function of lithology and structure. Often, this weathering limited case is most important at the highest part of the stream network. ‘Special’ Cases (described by Kirkby {after GK Gilbert})
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Transport Limited Weathering Limited
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Discussion questions: How do we understand the shape of landscapes? What controls whether a slope is mantled by soil or debris and shallow-sloping versus steeply-sloping and characterized by exposed bedrock? Can we apply this approach to Mars? Possible areas to think about: Gullied Landscapes? Valles Marineris wall retreat? Modification of craters and lava flows (perhaps different in Amazonian/Hesperian/Noachian?)
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