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Controls on Zero‐Order Basin Morphology
Author(s) -
Grieve Stuart W. D.,
Hales Tristram C.,
Parker Robert N.,
Mudd Simon M.,
Clubb Fiona J.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9011
pISSN - 2169-9003
DOI - 10.1029/2017jf004453
Subject(s) - structural basin , fluvial , geology , elevation (ballistics) , hydrology (agriculture) , landslide , drainage basin , geomorphology , sediment , precipitation , geometry , geography , geotechnical engineering , mathematics , cartography , meteorology
Zero‐order basins are common features of soil‐mantled landscapes, defined as unchanneled basins at the head of a drainage network. Their geometry and volume control how quickly sediment may reaccumulate after landslide evacuation and, more broadly, zero order basins govern the movement of water and sediment from hillslopes to the fluvial network. They also deliver water and sediment to the uppermost portions of the fluvial network. Despite this role as the moderator between hillslope and fluvial processes, little analysis on their morphology has been conducted at the landscape scale. We present a method to identify zero‐order basins in landscapes and subsequently quantify their geometric properties using elliptical Fourier analysis. We deploy this method across the Coweeta Hydrologic Laboratory, USA. Properties such as length, relief, width, and concavity follow distinct probability distributions, which may serve as a basis for testing predictions of future landscape evolution models. Surprisingly, in a landscape with an orographic precipitation gradient and large hillslope to channel relief, we observe no correlation between elevation or spatial location and basin geometry. However, we find that two physiographic units in Coweeta have distinct zero‐order basin morphologies. These are the steep, thin soiled, high‐elevation Nantahala Escarpment and the lower‐gradient, lower‐elevation, thick soiled remainder of the basin. Our results indicate that basin slope and area negatively covary, producing the distinct forms observed between the two physiographic units, which we suggest arise through competition between spatially variable soil creep and stochastic landsliding.

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