4.8 Article

The role of lateral erosion in the evolution of nondendritic drainage networks to dendricity and the persistence of dynamic networks

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2015770118

Keywords

drainage networks; landscape evolution; lateral migration; drainage reorganization

Funding

  1. NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program [DGE-1144245]
  2. NSF [EAR-1427262, OIA-1833025]

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Tree-like river networks are common features on Earth's landscapes, but the mechanisms behind their formation are not yet fully understood. A new model has been developed that can achieve large-scale drainage reorganization through lateral bedrock incision, which allows for river capture events and drainage migration. The key factor influencing the rate and frequency of drainage network reorganization in this model is the ratio of lateral and vertical rock erodibility constants.
Dendritic, i.e., tree-like, river networks are ubiquitous features on Earth's landscapes; however, how and why river networks organize themselves into this form are incompletely understood. A branching pattern has been argued to be an optimal state. Therefore, we should expect models of river evolution to drastically reorganize (suboptimal) purely nondendritic networks into (more optimal) dendritic networks. To date, current physically based models of river basin evolution are incapable of achieving this result without substantial allogenic forcing. Here, we present a model that does indeed accomplish massive drainage reorganization. The key feature in our model is basin-wide lateral incision of bedrock channels. The addition of this submodel allows for channels to laterally migrate, which generates river capture events and drainage migration. An important factor in the model that dictates the rate and frequency of drainage network reorganization is the ratio of two parameters, the lateral and vertical rock erodibility constants. In addition, our model is unique from others because its simulations approach a dynamic steady state. At a dynamic steady state, drainage networks persistently reorganize instead of approaching a stable configuration. Our model results suggest that lateral bedrock incision processes can drive major drainage reorganization and explain apparent long-lived transience in landscapes on Earth.

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