constraining the stream power law: a novel approach combining a landscape evolution model and an inversion method
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2014
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Abstract
In the past few decades, many studies have been dedicated to the
understanding of the interactions between tectonics and erosion, in many
instances through the use of numerical models of landscape evolution. Among
the numerous parameterizations that have been developed to predict river
channel evolution, the stream power law, which links erosion rate to drainage
area and slope, remains the most widely used. Despite its simple formulation,
its power lies in its capacity to reproduce many of the characteristic
features of natural systems (the concavity of river profile, the propagation
of knickpoints, etc.). However, the three main coefficients that are needed
to relate erosion rate to slope and drainage area in the stream power law
remain poorly constrained. In this study, we present a novel approach to
constrain the stream power law coefficients under the detachment-limited mode
by combining a highly efficient landscape evolution model, FastScape, which
solves the stream power law under arbitrary geometries and boundary
conditions and an inversion algorithm, the neighborhood algorithm. A misfit
function is built by comparing topographic data of a reference landscape
supposedly at steady state and the same landscape subject to both uplift and
erosion over one time step. By applying the method to a synthetic landscape,
we show that different landscape characteristics can be retrieved, such as
the concavity of river profiles and the steepness index. When applied on a
real catchment (in the Whataroa region of the South Island in New Zealand),
this approach provides well-resolved constraints on the concavity of river
profiles and the distribution of uplift as a function of distance to the
Alpine Fault, the main active structure in the area.
| Reference Key |
croissant2014earthconstraining
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|---|---|
| Authors | ;T. Croissant;J. Braun |
| Journal | experimental gerontology |
| Year | 2014 |
| DOI |
10.5194/esurf-2-155-2014
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| URL | |
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