Investigating the surface process response to fault interaction and linkage using a numerical modelling approach

被引:117
|
作者
Cowie, P. A.
Attal, M.
Tucker, G. E.
Whittaker, A. C.
Naylor, M.
Ganas, A.
Roberts, G. P.
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Sch Geosci, Inst Earth Sci, Edinburgh EH9 3JW, Midlothian, Scotland
[2] Univ Colorado, CIRES, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[3] Univ Colorado, Dept Geol Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
[4] Natl Observ Athens, Inst Geodynam, Athens, Greece
[5] Univ London Birkbeck Coll, Res Sch Geol & Geophys Sci, London WC1E 6BT, England
[6] UCL, London, England
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2117.2006.00298.x
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
In order to better understand the evolution of rift-related topography and sedimentation, we present the results of a numerical modelling study in which elevation changes generated by extensional fault propagation, interaction and linkage are used to drive a landscape evolution model. Drainage network development, landsliding and sediment accumulation in response to faulting are calculated using CASCADE, a numerical model developed by Braun and Sambridge, and the results are compared with field examples. We first show theoretically how the 'fluvial length scale', L-f, in the fluvial incision algorithm can be related to the erodibility of the substrate and can be varied to mimic a range of river behaviour between detachment-limited (DL) and transport-limited (TL) end-member models for river incision. We also present new hydraulic geometry data from an extensional setting which show that channel width does not scale with drainage area where a channel incises through an area of active footwall uplift. We include this information in the coupled model, initially for a single value of L-f, and use it to demonstrate how fault interaction controls the location of the main drainage divide and thus the size of the footwall catchments that develop along an evolving basin-bounding normal fault. We show how erosion by landsliding and fluvial incision varies as the footwall area grows and quantify the volume, source area, and timing of sediment input to the hanging-wall basin through time. We also demonstrate how fault growth imposes a geometrical control on the scaling of river discharge with downstream distance within the footwall catchments, thus influencing the incision rate of rivers that drain into the hanging-wall basin. Whether these rivers continue to flow into the basin after the basin-bounding fault becomes fully linked strongly depends on the value of L-f. We show that such rivers are more likely to maintain their course if they are close to the TL end member (small L-f); as a river becomes progressively more under supplied, i.e. the DL end member (large L-f), it is more likely to be deflected or dammed by the growing fault. These model results are compared quantitatively with real drainage networks from mainland Greece, the Italian Apennines and eastern California. Finally, we infer the calibre of sediments entering the hanging-wall basin by integrating measurements of erosion rate across the growing footwall with the variation in surface processes in space and time. Combining this information with the observed structural control of sediment entry points into individual hanging-wall depocentres we develop a greater understanding of facies changes associated with the rift-initiation to rift-climax transition previously recognised in syn-rift stratigraphy.
引用
收藏
页码:231 / 266
页数:36
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Modelling and Optimization of Polycaprolactone Ultrafine-Fibres Electrospinning Process Using Response Surface Methodology
    Anindyajati, Adhi
    Boughton, Philip
    Ruys, Andrew J.
    MATERIALS, 2018, 11 (03):
  • [42] Optimization and Modelling of Chemical Oxygen Demand Removal by ANAMMOX Process Using Response Surface Methodology
    Jalilzadeh, Ali
    Nabizadeh, Ramin
    Mesdaghinia, Alireza
    Azimi, Aliakbar
    Nasseri, Simin
    Mahvi, Amir Hossein
    Naddafi, Kazem
    JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY, 2013, 2013
  • [43] Modelling and combined effect analysis of electric discharge Machining process using response surface methodology
    Matharou, Gurpreet Singh
    Bhuyan, Basanta Kumar
    MATERIALS TODAY-PROCEEDINGS, 2021, 46 : 6638 - 6643
  • [44] Investigating smart manufacturing process implementation in the Indian manufacturing industries using tecnomatix and response surface methodology
    More, Yogeshrao Y.
    Buktar, Rajesh B.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERACTIVE DESIGN AND MANUFACTURING - IJIDEM, 2024, : 3363 - 3385
  • [45] Analysis of lateral rock spreading process initiation with a numerical modelling approach
    Bois, Thomas
    Zerathe, Swann
    Lebourg, Thomas
    Tric, Emmanuel
    TERRA NOVA, 2018, 30 (05) : 369 - 379
  • [46] Early career burnout among nurses: Modelling a hypothesized process using an item response approach
    Gustavsson, J. Petter
    Hallsten, Lennart
    Rudman, Ann
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NURSING STUDIES, 2010, 47 (07) : 864 - 875
  • [47] Segment linkage process at the origin of slip surface roughness: Evidence from the Dixie Valley fault
    Candela, Thibault
    Renard, Francois
    JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY, 2012, 45 : 85 - 98
  • [48] Groundwater - Surface Water Interaction: Process Understanding, Conceptualization and Modelling: Preface
    British Geological Survey, Maclean Building, Crowmarsh Gifford, Wallingford OX10 8BB, United Kingdom
    不详
    不详
    IAHS-AISH Publ., 2008, 321 (v-vi):
  • [49] A novel approach to combine response functions in ecological process modelling
    Stange, Claus Florian
    ECOLOGICAL MODELLING, 2007, 204 (3-4) : 547 - 552
  • [50] 3D numerical modelling of graben interaction and linkage: a case study of the Canyonlands grabens, Utah
    Allken, Vaneeda
    Huismans, Ritske S.
    Fossen, Haakon
    Thieulot, Cedric
    BASIN RESEARCH, 2013, 25 (04) : 436 - 449