Much of the tectonic and climatic history in high-relief regions, such as the mountains of the western U.S. Basin and Range province, is contained in the morphology of hillslopes, drainage networks, and other landforms that range in scale from 10−1 to 101km. To understand how these landforms evolve, we have developed a numerical landscape evolution model that combines a detailed tectonic displacement field with a set of physically based geomorphic rules. Bedrock landsliding, long recognized as a significant geomorphic process in mountainous topography, is for the first time explicitly included in the rule set. In a series of numerical experiments, we generate synthetic landscapes that closely resemble mountainous topography observed in the ...
The size of a shallow landslide is a fundamental control on both its hazard and geomorphic importanc...
We review the role of landslides in current concepts of the topographic development of mountain rang...
Many geomorphic studies assume that bedrock geology is not a first-order control on landscape form i...
Widespread triggering of landslides by large storms or earthquakes is a dominant mechanism of erosio...
Landscape morphology reflects the spatial and temporal history of erosion. Erosion in turn embodies ...
Fault growth produces patterns of displacement and slip rate that are highly variable in both space ...
Earth's surface archives the combined history of tectonics and erosion, which tend to roughen landsc...
Topographic development in mountainous landscapes is a complex interplay between tectonics, climate ...
Earthquakes trigger widespread landsliding in tectonically-active landscapes. The effects of strong ...
Bedrock landsliding is a common landscape process in moderate-high relief landscapes, particularly d...
Erosive landscapes are formed from the amalgamation of individual sediment transport over space and ...
[1] Bedrock gorges incising glacial hanging valleys potentially allow measurements of fluvial bedroc...
[1] In mountainous terrain, deep‐seated landslides transport large volumes of material on hillslopes...
The aim is to investigate the evolution of the subglacial landscape of Antarctica using an ice sheet...
Tectonic plate motion, and the resulting change in land surface elevation, has been shown to have a ...
The size of a shallow landslide is a fundamental control on both its hazard and geomorphic importanc...
We review the role of landslides in current concepts of the topographic development of mountain rang...
Many geomorphic studies assume that bedrock geology is not a first-order control on landscape form i...
Widespread triggering of landslides by large storms or earthquakes is a dominant mechanism of erosio...
Landscape morphology reflects the spatial and temporal history of erosion. Erosion in turn embodies ...
Fault growth produces patterns of displacement and slip rate that are highly variable in both space ...
Earth's surface archives the combined history of tectonics and erosion, which tend to roughen landsc...
Topographic development in mountainous landscapes is a complex interplay between tectonics, climate ...
Earthquakes trigger widespread landsliding in tectonically-active landscapes. The effects of strong ...
Bedrock landsliding is a common landscape process in moderate-high relief landscapes, particularly d...
Erosive landscapes are formed from the amalgamation of individual sediment transport over space and ...
[1] Bedrock gorges incising glacial hanging valleys potentially allow measurements of fluvial bedroc...
[1] In mountainous terrain, deep‐seated landslides transport large volumes of material on hillslopes...
The aim is to investigate the evolution of the subglacial landscape of Antarctica using an ice sheet...
Tectonic plate motion, and the resulting change in land surface elevation, has been shown to have a ...
The size of a shallow landslide is a fundamental control on both its hazard and geomorphic importanc...
We review the role of landslides in current concepts of the topographic development of mountain rang...
Many geomorphic studies assume that bedrock geology is not a first-order control on landscape form i...