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Effect of limited storm duration on landscape evolution, drainage basin geometry, and hydrograph shapes

TLDR
In this paper, an analytic solution for non-steady state peak discharge was proposed to investigate how changes in storm duration alter hydrograph characteristics and the shape of the resulting equilibrium landscape, showing that decreasing relative storm duration results in downstreamdecreasing equilibrium channel concavity and decreasing valley density.
Abstract
[1] Landscape evolution models that calculate erosion as a function of discharge usually assume steady state runoff conditions and compute discharge as a power law function of the contributing area. This assumption is appropriate for small catchments and for regions in which the climate is characterized by long-lasting rainfall events. With larger catchments or shorter storms, however, the travel time of a water particle from the divide to the catchment outlet is typically longer than the characteristic storm duration. Hence a hydrologic steady state cannot be reached. This paper offers an analytic solution for nonsteady state peak discharge and investigates how changes in storm duration alter hydrograph characteristics and the shape of the resulting equilibrium landscape. An asymptotic function is used to incorporate the effect of storm duration into a landscape evolution model. We demonstrate with numerical simulations and analytical results that decreasing relative storm duration results in downstream-decreasing equilibrium channel concavity and decreasing valley density. It is also shown that this nonsteady state runoff system is less stable than the system of steady state runoff processes. Under certain conditions, no fixed dynamic equilibrium state exists. Furthermore, analysis of the shape of runoff hydrographs reveals feedback mechanisms manifested between hydrograph shape, erosion, and morphogenesis, demonstrating a compensatory mechanism between external precipitation input and internal runoff production.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Modelling landscape evolution

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of landscape theory in the form of numerical models of drainage basin evolution and the current knowledge gaps and future computing challenges that exist, as well as a review of the current state of the art.
Journal ArticleDOI

How do landscapes record tectonics and climate

TL;DR: This paper reviewed the current knowledge of how fluvial landscapes record tectonics at topographic steady-state and under "transient" conditions, assesses why the climate signal has proven so challenging to interpret, and maps out where we need to go in the future.
Journal ArticleDOI

Integrating the LISFLOOD-FP 2D hydrodynamic model with the CAESAR model: implications for modelling landscape evolution

TL;DR: The CAESAR-Lisflood-FP simplified 2D flow model as discussed by the authors solves a reduced form of the shallow water equations using a very simple numerical scheme, thus generating a significant increase in computational efficiency over previous hydrodynamic methods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Regional analysis of bedrock stream long profiles: evaluation of Hack's SL form, and formulation and assessment of an alternative (the DS form)

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the SL form is a special case of a more general form of the equilibrium long profile (here called the DS form) that can be derived from the power relationship between stream discharge and downstream distance, and the dependence of stream incision on stream power.
Journal ArticleDOI

Contrasting transient and steady-state rivers crossing active normal faults: new field observations from the Central Apennines, Italy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present detailed data on channel morphology, valley width and grain size for three bedrock rivers crossing active normal faults which diier in their rate, history and spatial distribution of uplift.
References
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Book

The hydraulic geometry of stream channels and some physiographic implications

TL;DR: In this paper, the hydraulic characteristics of stream channels are measured quantitatively and vary with discharge as simple power functions at a given river cross section, and similar variations in relation to discharge exist among the cross sections along the length of a river under the condition that discharge at all points is equal in frequency of occurrence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Magnitude and Frequency of Forces in Geomorphic Processes

TL;DR: The relative importance in geomorphic processes of extreme or catastrophic events and more frequent events of smaller magnitude can be measured in terms of the relative amounts of "work" done on the landscape and the formation of specific features of the landscape as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics of the stream‐power river incision model: Implications for height limits of mountain ranges, landscape response timescales, and research needs

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the stream power erosion model in an effort to elucidate its consequences in terms of large-scale topographic (fluvial) relief and its sensitivity to tectonic and climatic forcing.
Journal ArticleDOI

A detachment-limited model of drainage basin evolution

TL;DR: In this article, a drainage basin simulation model incorporating creep and threshold slumping and both detachment-and transport-limited fluvial processes is introduced, and it is argued that fluvial erosion of natural slopes and headwater channels is dominantly detachment-limited.
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