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Quantitative morphologic analysis of boulder shape and surface texture to infer environmental history: A case study of rock breakdown at the Ephrata Fan, Channeled Scabland, Washington
Author(s) -
Ehlmann Bethany L.,
Viles Heather A.,
Bourke Mary C.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2007jf000872
Subject(s) - geology , outcrop , lithology , weathering , overprinting , compositional data , terrain , geomorphology , erosion , texture (cosmology) , geochemistry , paleontology , tectonics , cartography , artificial intelligence , computer science , image (mathematics) , statistics , mathematics , geography
Boulder morphology reflects both lithology and climate and is dictated by the combined effects of erosion, transport, and weathering. At present, morphologic information at the boulder scale is underutilized as a recorder of environmental processes, partly because of the lack of a systematic quantitative parameter set for reporting and comparing data sets. We develop such a parameter set, incorporating a range of measures of boulder form and surface texture. We use standard shape metrics measured in the field and fractal and morphometric classification methods borrowed from landscape analysis and applied to laser‐scanned molds. The parameter set was pilot tested on three populations of basalt boulders with distinct breakdown histories in the Channeled Scabland, Washington: (1) basalt outcrop talus; (2) flood‐transported boulders recently excavated from a quarry; and (3) flood‐transported boulders, extensively weathered in situ on the Ephrata Fan surface. Size and shape data were found to distinguish between flood‐transported and untransported boulders. Size and edge angles (∼120°) of flood‐transported boulders suggest removal by preferential fracturing along preexisting columnar joints, and curvature data indicate rounding relative to outcrop boulders. Surface textural data show that boulders which have been exposed at the surface are significantly rougher than those buried by fan sediments. Past signatures diagnostic of flood transport still persist on surface boulders, despite ongoing overprinting by processes in the present breakdown environment through roughening and fracturing in situ. Further use of this quantitative boulder parameter set at other terrestrial and planetary sites will aid in cataloging and understanding morphologic signatures of environmental processes.

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