A geomorphic-process-based cellular automata model of colluvial wedge morphology and stratigraphy
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Published:2022-04-04
Issue:2
Volume:10
Page:329-348
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ISSN:2196-632X
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Container-title:Earth Surface Dynamics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Earth Surf. Dynam.
Author:
Gray Harrison J.ORCID, DuRoss Christopher B., Nicovich Sylvia R., Gold Ryan D.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The development of colluvial wedges at the base of fault
scarps following normal-faulting earthquakes serves as a sedimentary record
of paleoearthquakes and is thus crucial in assessing seismic hazard.
Although there is a large body of observations of colluvial wedge
development, connecting this knowledge to the physics of sediment transport
can open new frontiers in our understanding. To explore theoretical
colluvial wedge evolution, we develop a cellular automata model driven by
the production and disturbance (e.g., bioturbative reworking) of mobile
regolith and fault-scarp collapse. We consider both 90 and
60∘ dipping faults and allow the colluvial wedges to develop over
2000 model years. By tracking sediment transport time, velocity, and
provenance, we classify cells into analogs for the debris and wash
sedimentary facies commonly described in paleoseismic studies. High values
of mobile regolith production and disturbance rates produce relatively
larger and more wash-facies-dominated wedges, whereas lower values produced
relatively smaller, debris-facies-dominated wedges. Higher lateral collapse
rates lead to more debris facies relative to wash facies. Many of the
modeled colluvial wedges fully developed within 2000 model years after the
earthquake, with many being much faster when process rates are high. Finally,
for scenarios with the same amount of vertical displacement, differently sized
colluvial wedges developed depending on the rates of geomorphic processes
and fault dip. A change in these variables, say by environmental change such
as precipitation rates, could theoretically result in different colluvial
wedge facies assemblages for the same characteristic earthquake rupture
scenario. Finally, the stochastic nature of collapse events, when coupled
with high disturbance, illustrates that multiple phases of colluvial
deposition are theoretically possible for a single earthquake event.
Funder
U.S. Geological Survey
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics
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