Much understanding of continental topographic evolution is rooted in measuring and predicting rates at which rivers erode. Flume tank and field observations indicate that stochasticity and local conditions play important roles in determining rates at small scales (e.g. < 10 km, thousands of years). Obversely, preserved river profiles and common shapes of rivers atop uplifting topography indicate that erosion rates are predictable at larger scales. These observations indicate that the response of rivers to forcing can be scale dependent. Here I demonstrate that erosional thresholds can provide an explanation for why profile evolution can be very complicated and unique at small scales yet simple and predictable at large scales
Existing models for the development of topography and relief over geological timescales are fundamen...
Natural damming of upland river systems, such as landslide or lava damming, occurs worldwide. Many d...
International audienceSpatial variations of gradients in landscapes may be used to identify and quan...
Landscape topography is the expression of the dynamic equilibrium between external forcings (for exa...
Geometries of eroding landscapes contain important information about geologic, climatic, biotic and ...
The current suite of numerical landscape models suggest that, under steady forcing, erosional landsc...
This is an invited oral presentation given on December 11th, 2018 at the American Geophysical Union ...
International audienceWe explore the extent to which it is possible to convert erosion rate data int...
A range of complex hydraulic and geomorphic processes shape terrestrial landscapes. It remains uncle...
Abstract: A range of complex hydraulic and geomorphic processes shape terrestrial landscapes. It rem...
This is an oral presentation given on December 13th, 2017 at the American Geophysical Union annual m...
The evolution of a fluvial landscape is a balance between tectonic uplift, fluvial erasion, and sedi...
The evolution of rivers in eroding landscapes plays a key role in determining landscape relief and m...
International audienceThe evolution of a fluvial landscape is a balance between tectonic uplift, flu...
Existing models for the development of topography and relief over geological timescales are fundamen...
Natural damming of upland river systems, such as landslide or lava damming, occurs worldwide. Many d...
International audienceSpatial variations of gradients in landscapes may be used to identify and quan...
Landscape topography is the expression of the dynamic equilibrium between external forcings (for exa...
Geometries of eroding landscapes contain important information about geologic, climatic, biotic and ...
The current suite of numerical landscape models suggest that, under steady forcing, erosional landsc...
This is an invited oral presentation given on December 11th, 2018 at the American Geophysical Union ...
International audienceWe explore the extent to which it is possible to convert erosion rate data int...
A range of complex hydraulic and geomorphic processes shape terrestrial landscapes. It remains uncle...
Abstract: A range of complex hydraulic and geomorphic processes shape terrestrial landscapes. It rem...
This is an oral presentation given on December 13th, 2017 at the American Geophysical Union annual m...
The evolution of a fluvial landscape is a balance between tectonic uplift, fluvial erasion, and sedi...
The evolution of rivers in eroding landscapes plays a key role in determining landscape relief and m...
International audienceThe evolution of a fluvial landscape is a balance between tectonic uplift, flu...
Existing models for the development of topography and relief over geological timescales are fundamen...
Natural damming of upland river systems, such as landslide or lava damming, occurs worldwide. Many d...
International audienceSpatial variations of gradients in landscapes may be used to identify and quan...