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Published March 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

A Mechanistic Model and Experiments on Bedrock Incision and Channelization by Rockfall

  • 1. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Rockfall and rock avalanches are common in steep terrain on Earth and potentially on other planetary bodies such as the Moon and Mars. Since impacting rocks can damage exposed bedrock as they roll and bounce downhill, rockfall might be an important erosive agent in steep landscapes, even in the absence of water. We developed a new theory for rockfall-driven bedrock abrasion using the ballistic trajectories of rocks transported under gravity. We calibrated this theory using laboratory experiments of rockfall over an inclined bedrock simulant. Both the experiments and the model demonstrate that bedrock hillslopes can be abraded by dry rockfall, even at gradients below the angle of repose, depending on the bedrock roughness. Feedback between abrasion and topographic steering of rockfall can produce channel-like forms, such as bedrock chutes, in the absence of water. Particle size has a dominant influence on abrasion rates and runout distances, while the hillslope angle has a comparatively minor influence. Rockfall transport is sensitive to bedrock roughness; terrain with high friction angles can trap rocks creating patches of rock cover that affect subsequent rockfall pathways. Our results suggest that dry rockfall can play an important role in eroding and channelizing steep, rocky terrain on Earth and other planets, such as crater degradation on the Moon and Mars.

Contributions

Conceptualization: A. R. Beer, M. P. Lamb

Data curation: A. R. Beer

Formal analysis: A. R. Beer, J. N. Fischer

Funding acquisition: A. R. Beer, M. P. Lamb

Investigation: A. R. Beer, J. N. Fischer, T. P. Ulizio, Z. Ma, Z. Sun, M. P. Lamb

Methodology: A. R. Beer, T. P. Ulizio, Z. Ma, Z. Sun, M. P. Lamb

Project administration: A. R. Beer, M. P. Lamb

Resources: T. P. Ulizio, M. P. Lamb

Software: A. R. Beer

Supervision: M. P. Lamb

Validation: A. R. Beer

Visualization: A. R. Beer

Writing – original draft: A. R. Beer, M. P. Lamb

Acknowledgement

We are thankful to Joel Scheingross for help with PU foam selection, Roman DiBiase for providing his model code, and Kim Miller for measuring grain friction angles. Thorough comments from three anonymous reviewers and the associate editor Kathy Barnhart greatly helped to improve the manuscript. This study was supported by SNSF Grant P2EZP2_172109 to ARB, Caltech SURF fellowships to JNF and ZM, China Scholarship Council Grant 201906410043 and NSFC Grant 42202120 to ZS, and NASA Grant 80NSSC19K1269 and NSF Grant 1558479 to MPL.

Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.

Data Availability

The experimental data and the dry gravel abrasion model DGAM code (in R language) is publicly available at https://fdat.uni-tuebingen.de/records/98546-hfv72 (Beer et al., 2024).

Supporting information S1

Files

JGR Earth Surface - 2024 - Beer - A Mechanistic Model and Experiments on Bedrock Incision and Channelization by Rockfall.pdf

Additional details

Created:
June 24, 2024
Modified:
June 24, 2024