Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences

Alluvial fans are ubiquitous landforms in high-relief regions on Earth and Mars. They have a semi-conical shape and are located at the transition between highlands and adjacent basins. Alluvial fans can form by a range of processes including debris flows, which are water-laden masses of soil and roc...

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Main Author: de Haas, T.
Other Authors: Biogeomorphology of Rivers and Estuaries, Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change, Landscape functioning, Geocomputation and Hydrology, Kleinhans, Maarten, de Jong, Steven, Hauber, Ernst
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/326021
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spelling ftunivutrecht:oai:dspace.library.uu.nl:1874/326021 2023-07-23T04:21:59+02:00 Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences de Haas, T. Biogeomorphology of Rivers and Estuaries Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change Landscape functioning, Geocomputation and Hydrology Kleinhans, Maarten de Jong, Steven Hauber, Ernst 2016-02-05 image/pdf https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/326021 en eng Utrecht University https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/326021 info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess Alluvial fan debris flow weathering erosion gullies Mars Svalbard Atacama Dissertation 2016 ftunivutrecht 2023-07-02T01:35:31Z Alluvial fans are ubiquitous landforms in high-relief regions on Earth and Mars. They have a semi-conical shape and are located at the transition between highlands and adjacent basins. Alluvial fans can form by a range of processes including debris flows, which are water-laden masses of soil and rock with volumetric sediment concentrations exceeding 40%. In this thesis, I aim to (1) unravel the formative dynamics of debris-flow fans and, building on these insights, to (2) reconstruct hydrologic and climatic conditions in the last few millions of years on Mars from alluvial fan deposits (gullies). The dynamics of debris flows and debris-flow fans were studied in small-scale laboratory experiments. Debris-flow runout, and thus its hazardous effect, increases with channel and alluvial fan slope and with debris-flow volume and water fraction. There is an optimum relation between debris-flow runout and coarse-material fraction and clay fraction in the flow. Debris-flow fans were observed to form by autogenic sequences of backfilling, avulsion (i.e., channel shift) and channelization. These sequences are governed by large-scale topographic compensation. Gullies are catchment-alluvial fan systems found on crater walls on Mars. They are among the youngest landforms that may have formed by liquid water on Mars (they can be younger than 1 Ma), and therefore of critical importance in resolving the planet's recent hydrologic and climatic history. The formation of alluvial fans by cyclic sequences of backfilling, avulsion and channelization implies that fans comprise active and inactive sectors. Long inactive parts of alluvial fans are exposed to modification by secondary, post-depositional, processes, including weathering, wind erosion and fluvial erosion. Long-inactive fan surfaces are therefore likely to be masked by a surface morphology related to secondary processes. The effectiveness of post-depositional modification depends on the ratio between the characteristic time scales to build morphology by primary deposition ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Svalbard Utrecht University Repository Svalbard
institution Open Polar
collection Utrecht University Repository
op_collection_id ftunivutrecht
language English
topic Alluvial fan
debris flow
weathering
erosion
gullies
Mars
Svalbard
Atacama
spellingShingle Alluvial fan
debris flow
weathering
erosion
gullies
Mars
Svalbard
Atacama
de Haas, T.
Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
topic_facet Alluvial fan
debris flow
weathering
erosion
gullies
Mars
Svalbard
Atacama
description Alluvial fans are ubiquitous landforms in high-relief regions on Earth and Mars. They have a semi-conical shape and are located at the transition between highlands and adjacent basins. Alluvial fans can form by a range of processes including debris flows, which are water-laden masses of soil and rock with volumetric sediment concentrations exceeding 40%. In this thesis, I aim to (1) unravel the formative dynamics of debris-flow fans and, building on these insights, to (2) reconstruct hydrologic and climatic conditions in the last few millions of years on Mars from alluvial fan deposits (gullies). The dynamics of debris flows and debris-flow fans were studied in small-scale laboratory experiments. Debris-flow runout, and thus its hazardous effect, increases with channel and alluvial fan slope and with debris-flow volume and water fraction. There is an optimum relation between debris-flow runout and coarse-material fraction and clay fraction in the flow. Debris-flow fans were observed to form by autogenic sequences of backfilling, avulsion (i.e., channel shift) and channelization. These sequences are governed by large-scale topographic compensation. Gullies are catchment-alluvial fan systems found on crater walls on Mars. They are among the youngest landforms that may have formed by liquid water on Mars (they can be younger than 1 Ma), and therefore of critical importance in resolving the planet's recent hydrologic and climatic history. The formation of alluvial fans by cyclic sequences of backfilling, avulsion and channelization implies that fans comprise active and inactive sectors. Long inactive parts of alluvial fans are exposed to modification by secondary, post-depositional, processes, including weathering, wind erosion and fluvial erosion. Long-inactive fan surfaces are therefore likely to be masked by a surface morphology related to secondary processes. The effectiveness of post-depositional modification depends on the ratio between the characteristic time scales to build morphology by primary deposition ...
author2 Biogeomorphology of Rivers and Estuaries
Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change
Landscape functioning, Geocomputation and Hydrology
Kleinhans, Maarten
de Jong, Steven
Hauber, Ernst
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author de Haas, T.
author_facet de Haas, T.
author_sort de Haas, T.
title Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
title_short Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
title_full Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
title_fullStr Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
title_full_unstemmed Life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on Earth and Mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
title_sort life, death and revival of debris-flow fans on earth and mars: fan dynamics and climatic inferences
publisher Utrecht University
publishDate 2016
url https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/326021
geographic Svalbard
geographic_facet Svalbard
genre Svalbard
genre_facet Svalbard
op_relation https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/326021
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/OpenAccess
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