A new model, the variable width/depth ratio (VWDR) model, is used to analyze longitudinal variations in cross-section morphology along glacial valleys. III the VWDR, the cross-sectional shape of a valley is expressed as a function of the width/depth ratio at various heights above the valley floor. Two parameters, in, a measure of the breadth of the valley floor, and n, a measure of the steepness of the valley sides, appear in the model. We have used the VWDR model to study morphological variations of cross-sections along glacial valleys in the middle Tien Shan mountains, China, and find that: (1) in valleys without tributaries, Tn increases (the valley floor becomes wider) and n becomes more negative (valley sides become steeper) from the h...
River networks define specific scaling relations in the landscape. Accordingly, contributing area sc...
In many cases the response of a glacier to changing climatic conditions is complicated due to the l...
Glaciers and rivers are the main agents of mountain erosion. While in the fluvial realm empirical re...
The morphology of glacial valley cross-sections can be described in terms of power law (y = ax(h)) o...
Several alpine valley systems in the southeastern Beartooth Mountains, Montana and Wyoming, have bee...
Several valleys on the southern slopes of the western Uinta Mountains exhibit stepped erosional prof...
The morphology of glacial valleys in the Victoria Valley system, Antarctica, was quantitatively anal...
Fluvial terraces carved by incising rivers are widely used to investigate external forcing by climat...
At middle to high latitudes, many alpine valleys have been shaped by glaciers associated with period...
The glacial valley cross-profile has traditionally had its development attrituted to the physical pr...
Debris-covered glaciers receive increasing attention during this period of sustained negative mass b...
One of the most fundamental insights for understanding how landscapes evolve is based on determining...
Overdeepenings, i.e. closed topographic depressions with adverse slopes in the direction of flow, ar...
Debris-covered glaciers receive increasing attention during the current period of sustained negative...
Abstract: Stress distribution in mountainous areas is influenced by local morphology. Valley morphol...
River networks define specific scaling relations in the landscape. Accordingly, contributing area sc...
In many cases the response of a glacier to changing climatic conditions is complicated due to the l...
Glaciers and rivers are the main agents of mountain erosion. While in the fluvial realm empirical re...
The morphology of glacial valley cross-sections can be described in terms of power law (y = ax(h)) o...
Several alpine valley systems in the southeastern Beartooth Mountains, Montana and Wyoming, have bee...
Several valleys on the southern slopes of the western Uinta Mountains exhibit stepped erosional prof...
The morphology of glacial valleys in the Victoria Valley system, Antarctica, was quantitatively anal...
Fluvial terraces carved by incising rivers are widely used to investigate external forcing by climat...
At middle to high latitudes, many alpine valleys have been shaped by glaciers associated with period...
The glacial valley cross-profile has traditionally had its development attrituted to the physical pr...
Debris-covered glaciers receive increasing attention during this period of sustained negative mass b...
One of the most fundamental insights for understanding how landscapes evolve is based on determining...
Overdeepenings, i.e. closed topographic depressions with adverse slopes in the direction of flow, ar...
Debris-covered glaciers receive increasing attention during the current period of sustained negative...
Abstract: Stress distribution in mountainous areas is influenced by local morphology. Valley morphol...
River networks define specific scaling relations in the landscape. Accordingly, contributing area sc...
In many cases the response of a glacier to changing climatic conditions is complicated due to the l...
Glaciers and rivers are the main agents of mountain erosion. While in the fluvial realm empirical re...