4.5 Article

Postglacial topographic evolution of glaciated valleys: a stochastic landscape evolution model

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 30, Issue 11, Pages 1387-1403

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.1199

Keywords

landscape evolution; stochastic processes; non-linear diffusion; paraglacial processes; climate change

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The retreat of valley glaciers has a dramatic effect on the stability of glaciated valleys and exerts a prolonged influence on the subsequent fluvial sediment transport regime. We have studied the evolution of an idealized glaciated valley during the period following retreat of ice using a numerical model. The model incorporates a stochastic process to represent deep-seated landsliding, non-linear diffusion to represent shallow landsliding and an approximation of the Bagnold relation to represent fluvial sediment transport. It was calibrated using field data from several recent surveys within British Columbia, Canada. We present ensemble model results and compare them with results from a deterministic linear-diffusion model to show that explicit representation of large landslides is necessary to reproduce the morphology and channel network structure of a typical postglacial valley. Our model predicts a rapid rate of fluvial sediment transport following deglaciation with a subsequent gradual decline, similar to that inferred for Holocene time. We also describe how changes in the model parameters affect the estimated magnitude and duration of the paraglacial sediment pulse. Copyright (c) 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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