A bottom-up control on fresh-bedrock topography under landscapes.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Department of Earth and Planetary Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720.

Published: May 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • The depth to unweathered bedrock affects factors like runoff, erosion, and water availability in landscapes.
  • A quantitative model is proposed to predict how deep weathered rock is beneath soil-covered hills, based on processes like channel incision that influence drainage.
  • The model shows that the thickness of the weathered zone increases upslope, leading to longer residence times for bedrock in this weathered area, and is supported by data from three different field sites.

Article Abstract

The depth to unweathered bedrock beneath landscapes influences subsurface runoff paths, erosional processes, moisture availability to biota, and water flux to the atmosphere. Here we propose a quantitative model to predict the vertical extent of weathered rock underlying soil-mantled hillslopes. We hypothesize that once fresh bedrock, saturated with nearly stagnant fluid, is advected into the near surface through uplift and erosion, channel incision produces a lateral head gradient within the fresh bedrock inducing drainage toward the channel. Drainage of the fresh bedrock causes weathering through drying and permits the introduction of atmospheric and biotically controlled acids and oxidants such that the boundary between weathered and unweathered bedrock is set by the uppermost elevation of undrained fresh bedrock, Zb. The slow drainage of fresh bedrock exerts a "bottom up" control on the advance of the weathering front. The thickness of the weathered zone is calculated as the difference between the predicted topographic surface profile (driven by erosion) and the predicted groundwater profile (driven by drainage of fresh bedrock). For the steady-state, soil-mantled case, a coupled analytical solution arises in which both profiles are driven by channel incision. The model predicts a thickening of the weathered zone upslope and, consequently, a progressive upslope increase in the residence time of bedrock in the weathered zone. Two nondimensional numbers corresponding to the mean hillslope gradient and mean groundwater-table gradient emerge and their ratio defines the proportion of the hillslope relief that is unweathered. Field data from three field sites are consistent with model predictions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4020107PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1404763111DOI Listing

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