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From divots to swales: Hillslope sediment transport across divers length scales
Author(s) -
Furbish David Jon,
Haff Peter K.
Publication year - 2010
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 - 10.1029/2009jf001576
Subject(s) - splash , bioturbation , geology , flux (metallurgy) , soil production function , sediment transport , biological dispersal , geomorphology , soil science , advection , landslide , sediment , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental science , soil water , geotechnical engineering , physics , meteorology , thermodynamics , population , materials science , demography , pedogenesis , sociology , metallurgy
In soil‐mantled steeplands, soil motions associated with creep, ravel, rain splash, soil slips, tree throw, and rodent activity are patchy and intermittent and involve widely varying travel distances. To describe the collective effect of these motions, we formulate a nonlocal expression for the soil flux. This probabilistic formulation involves upslope and downslope convolutions of land surface geometry to characterize motions in both directions, notably accommodating the bidirectional dispersal of material on gentle slopes as well as mostly downslope dispersal on steeper slopes, and it distinguishes between the mobilization of soil material and the effect of surface slope in giving a downslope bias to the dispersal of mobilized material. The formulation separates dispersal associated with intermittent surface motions from the slower bulk behavior associated with small‐scale bioturbation and similar dilational processes operating mostly within the soil column. With a uniform rate of mobilization of soil material, the nearly parabolic form of a hillslope profile at steady state resembles a diffusive behavior. With a slope‐dependent rate of mobilization, the steady state hillslope profile takes on a nonparabolic form where land surface elevation varies with downslope distance x as x a with a ∼ 3/2, consistent with field observations and where the flux increases nonlinearly with increasing slope. The convolution description of the soil flux, when substituted into a suitable expression of conservation, yields a nonlinear Fokker‐Planck equation and can be mapped to discrete particle models of hillslope behavior and descriptions of soil‐grain transport by rain splash as a stochastic advection‐dispersion process.

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