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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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1404763111 | DOI Listing |
PLoS One
February 2024
Department of Biology, Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas, United States of America.
Sci Total Environ
December 2023
Department of Geosciences, University of Padova, Padova, Italy; Interdepartmental Center for Cultural Heritage - CIBA - University of Padova, Padova, Italy. Electronic address:
The monitoring of existing landfills is a pending environmental issue for the years to come. This monitoring is particularly challenging in the more and more common case of closed landfills, where direct investigation is difficult or impossible, calling for non-invasive methods, which in turn are stretched to maximizing their imaging capabilities in front of difficult logistical constraints, requiring novel and well-conceived scientific approaches. In this study we present a non-invasive approach designed and calibrated to identify the state of the subsoil underlying a closed urban waste landfill.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2022
Department of Biology, Ecology and Earth Sciences (DiBEST), University of Calabria, Via P. Bucci-Cubo 15B, 87036, Arcavacata Di Rende, CS, Italy.
Landscape evolution is driven by tectonics, climate and surface denudation. In New Zealand, tectonics and steep climatic gradients cause a dynamic landscape with intense chemical weathering, rapid soil formation, and high soil losses. In this study, soil, and elemental redistribution along two adjacent hillslopes in East Otago, New Zealand, having different landscape settings (ridge versus valley) are compared to identify soil weathering and erosion dynamics.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Total Environ
August 2022
Department of Environment & Energy, Sejong University, Seoul 05006, South Korea.
Changes in the cryosphere extent (e.g., glacier, ice sheet, permafrost, and snow) have been speculated to impact (bio)geochemical interactions and element budgets of seawater and pore fluids in Arctic regions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFData Brief
June 2022
Department of Archaeology, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales 2006, Australia.
Isotropic bedload gravels from an active fluvial system were collected from seven stations along the length of the Sabeto River of western Viti Levu, Fiji. Sampling was confined to clasts of Navilawa Monzonite, an intrusive rock that crops out only along the upper reaches of the river. The sampled gravels consisted of stream-bed surface material obtained from transects normal to the active channel.
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