Theory connecting non-local sediment transport, earth surface roughness, and the Sadler effect
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2017
abstract:
Earth surface evolution, like many natural phenomena typified by fluctuations on a wide
range of scales and deterministic smoothing, results in a statistically rough surface. We present theory
demonstrating that scaling exponents of topographic and stratigraphic statistics arise from long-time
averaging of noisy surface evolution rather than specific landscape evolution processes. This is
demonstrated through use of "elastic" Langevin equations that generically describe disturbance from
a flat earth surface using a noise term that is smoothed deterministically via sediment transport. When
smoothing due to transport is a local process, the geologic record self organizes such that a specific Sadler
effect and topographic power spectral density (PSD) emerge. Variations in PSD slope reflect the presence
or absence and character of nonlocality of sediment transport. The range of observed stratigraphic Sadler
slopes captures the same smoothing feature combined with the presence of long-range spatial correlation
in topographic disturbance.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Sadler effect; roughness; anomalous diffusion
List of contributors:
Taloni, Alessandro
Published in: