Impacts of Rainstorm Intensity and Temporal Pattern on Caprock Cliff Persistence and Hillslope Morphology in Drylands

Author:

Shmilovitz Yuval1ORCID,Tucker Gregory E.23ORCID,Rossi Matthew W.2ORCID,Morin Efrat1ORCID,Armon Moshe4,Pederson Joel5,Campforts Benjamin6ORCID,Haviv Itai7,Enzel Yehouda1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem The Fredy & Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences Jerusalem Israel

2. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences (CIRES) University of Colorado Boulder CO USA

3. Department of Geological Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

4. Department of Environmental Systems Science ETH Zurich Zurich Switzerland

5. Geosciences Department Utah State University Logan UT USA

6. Department of Earth Sciences Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

7. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences Ben‐Gurion University of the Negev Be'er Sheva Israel

Abstract

AbstractHillslope topographic change in response to climate and climate change is a key aspect of landscape evolution. The impact of short‐duration rainstorms on hillslope evolution in arid regions is persistently questioned but often not directly examined in landscape evolution studies, which are commonly based on mean climate proxies. This study focuses on hillslope surface processes responding to rainstorms in the driest regions of Earth. We present a numerical model for arid, rocky hillslopes with lithology of a softer rock layer capped by a cliff‐forming resistant layer. By representing the combined action of bedrock and clast weathering, cliff‐debris ravel, and runoff‐driven erosion, the model can reproduce commonly observed cliff‐profile morphology. Numerical experiments with a fixed base level were used to test hillslope response to cliff‐debris grain size, rainstorm intensities, and alternation between rainstorm patterns. The persistence of vertical cliffs and the pattern of sediment sorting depend on rainstorm intensities and the size of cliff debris. Numerical experiments confirm that these two variables could have driven the landscape in the Negev Desert (Israel) toward an observed spatial contrast in topographic form over the past 105–106 years. For a given total storm rain depth, short‐duration higher‐intensity rainstorms are more erosive, resulting in greater cliff retreat distances relative to longer, low‐intensity storms. Temporal alternation between rainstorm regimes produces hillslope profiles similar to those previously attributed to Quaternary oscillations in the mean climate. We suggest that arid hillslopes may undergo considerable geomorphic transitions solely by alternating intra‐storm patterns regardless of rainfall amounts.

Funder

United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation

National Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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