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Quantifying the controls on potential soil production rates: a case study of the San Gabriel Mountains, California

机译:量化潜在土壤生产率的控制措施:以加利福尼亚州圣盖博山为例

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The potential soil production rate, i.e., the upper limit at which bedrock can be converted into transportable material, limits how fast erosion can occur in mountain ranges in the absence of widespread landsliding in bedrock or intact regolith. Traditionally, the potential soil production rate has been considered to be solely dependent on climate and rock characteristics. Data from the San Gabriel Mountains of California, however, suggest that topographic steepness may also influence potential soil production rates. In this paper I test the hypothesis that topographically induced stress opening of preexisting fractures in the bedrock or intact regolith beneath hillslopes of the San Gabriel Mountains increases potential soil production rates in steep portions of the range. A mathematical model for this process predicts a relationship between potential soil production rates and average slope consistent with published data. Once the effects of average slope are accounted for, a small subset of the data suggests that cold temperatures may limit soil production rates at the highest elevations of the range due to the influence of temperature on vegetation growth. These results suggest that climate and rock characteristics may be the sole controls on potential soil production rates as traditionally assumed but that the porosity of bedrock or intact regolith may evolve with topographic steepness in a way that enhances the persistence of soil cover in compressive-stress environments. I develop an empirical equation that relates potential soil production rates in the San Gabriel Mountains to the average slope and a climatic index that accounts for temperature limitations on soil production rates at high elevations. Assuming a balance between soil production and erosion rates on the hillslope scale, I illustrate the interrelationships among potential soil production rates, soil thickness, erosion rates, and topographic steepness that result from the feedbacks among geomorphic, geophysical, and pedogenic processes in the San Gabriel Mountains.
机译:潜在的土壤生产率,即基岩可以转化为可运输物质的上限,限制了在基岩中没有广泛的滑坡或完整的碎屑岩的情况下,山区如何快速发生侵蚀。传统上,潜在的土壤生产率被认为仅取决于气候和岩石特征。但是,来自加利福尼亚州圣盖博山脉的数据表明,地形陡度也可能影响潜在的土壤生产率。在本文中,我检验了以下假设:在地形上引起的圣加布里埃尔山山坡下方基岩或完整碎屑岩中原有裂缝的应力张开增加了该范围陡峭部分的潜在土壤生产率。此过程的数学模型预测潜在的土壤生产率和平均坡度之间的关系与已发布的数据一致。一旦考虑了平均坡度的影响,一小部分数据表明,由于温度对植被生长的影响,低温可能限制范围最高海拔处的土壤生产率。这些结果表明,按照传统假设,气候和岩石特征可能是对潜在土壤生产率的唯一控制,但是基岩的孔隙度或完整的重生砾岩可能会随着地形的陡峭而变化,从而增加了压应力环境下​​土壤覆盖的持久性。 。我开发了一个经验公式,将圣加布里埃尔山的潜在土壤生产率与平均坡度和气候指数联系起来,该气候指数说明了高海拔地区土壤生产率的温度限制。假设在坡度范围内土壤产量和侵蚀速率之间保持平衡,我说明了潜在的土壤生产率,土壤厚度,侵蚀速率和地形陡度之间的相互关系,这些相互关系是由圣盖博地貌,地球物理和成岩过程之间的反馈所产生的山。

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