Pelletier, J.D., Drainage network
evolution in the Rainfall Erosion Facility: Dependence on initial
conditions, Geomorphology, 52, 183-196, 2003.
Abstract: Four
experiments in alluvial drainage basin evolution were carried out in
the Rainfall Erosion Facility (REF) at Colorado State University to
investigate the dependence of basin evolution on initial topography.
Basins were initially undissected. Each experiment began with a unique
initial condition representing various end-members of relief and
hypsometry. Drainage network development, hillslope processes, basin
denudation, and basin response to base-level lowering all depended
strongly on the initial topography. No classic model of drainage
network evolution was found to be generally applicable. Initially,
planar slopes first developed subparallel channels that extended
headward dendritically during an early phase of extension. Channel
incision occurred first in the interior of the basin where saturation
overland flow was greatest, not at the basin outlet as assumed in most
classic models of network development. Channels widened over time,
initiating lateral migration and drainage capture in the downslope
portion of the watershed before transferring lateral migration upslope.
Planar basins of larger initial gradient grew headward more quickly and
become more deeply entrenched, inhibiting late-stage lateral migration.
An experiment with initial relief concentrated at a plateau edge
evolved in several unique ways. A high ratio of subsurface-to-surface
flow gave rise to mass movements at the plateau edge and outlet
channels. Deep channels were quickly cut initially but did not extend
far upslope because slope instability undermined channel head
migration, leaving the plateau undissected and hence very slow to
erode. These results suggest that the distribution of relief within a
basin exerts an important control on drainage network pattern and basin
denudation. In addition, erosional basins may evolve in several
distinct modes characterized by particular combinations of hypsometry,
hillslope processes, and mean denudation rate.
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