Department of Geological Sciences, University of Oregon, 1272 University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403-1272, USA.
St. Anthony Falls Laboratory and National Center for Earth-Surface Dynamics, College of Science and Engineering, University of Minnesota, 2 Third Avenue SE, Minneapolis, MN 55414-2125, USA.
Science. 2015 Jul 3;349(6243):51-3. doi: 10.1126/science.aab0017.
Landscape evolution theory suggests that climate sets the scale of landscape dissection by modulating the competition between diffusive processes that sculpt convex hillslopes and advective processes that carve concave valleys. However, the link between the relative dominance of hillslope and valley transport processes and landscape scale is difficult to demonstrate in natural landscapes due to the episodic nature of erosion. Here, we report results from laboratory experiments combining diffusive and advective processes in an eroding landscape. We demonstrate that rainsplash-driven disturbances in our experiments are a robust proxy for hillslope transport, such that increasing hillslope transport efficiency decreases drainage density. Our experimental results demonstrate how the coupling of climate-driven hillslope- and valley-forming processes, such as bioturbation and runoff, dictates the scale of eroding landscapes.
景观演化理论表明,气候通过调节塑造凸形山坡的扩散过程和侵蚀凹形山谷的输运过程之间的竞争,来控制景观的分异尺度。然而,由于侵蚀的间歇性,在自然景观中很难证明山坡和山谷输运过程相对主导地位与景观尺度之间的联系。在这里,我们报告了在侵蚀景观中结合扩散和输运过程的实验室实验结果。我们证明,我们实验中的雨滴溅蚀驱动的干扰是山坡输运的一个强有力的替代指标,因此增加山坡输运效率会降低排水密度。我们的实验结果展示了气候驱动的山坡和山谷形成过程(如生物搅动和径流)的耦合如何决定侵蚀景观的尺度。