2014
DOI: 10.1002/2014jf003081
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Development of topographic asymmetry: Insights from dated cinder cones in the western United States

Abstract: Topographic asymmetry, that is, differences in the morphology of landscapes as a function of slope aspect, can be used to infer ecohydrogeomorphic feedback relationships. In this study, we document the dependence of topographic gradients and drainage densities on slope aspect and time/age in four Quaternary cinder cone fields in Arizona, Oregon, and California. Cinder cones are particularly useful as natural experiments in geomorphic evolution because they begin their evolution at a known time in the past (man… Show more

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Cited by 40 publications
(70 citation statements)
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“…While the configuration of drainage networks displays non-random components in a variety of landscapes surveyed here, it is only in sites in weak rocks where a strong north-south asymmetry in the density and length of low-order tributaries is observed. Past studies have focused on the role of contrasts in vegetation with aspect in driving asymmetry in channel networks (Istanbulluoglu et al, 2008;McGuire et al, 2014;Yetemen et al, 2015) and these certainly drive differences in landscape evolution. However, using remotely-sensed proxies for vegetation productivity, I demonstrate that all the surveyed sites are formed in climates that favor contrasts in vegetation with aspect.…”
Section: (Steinbeck East Of Eden)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…While the configuration of drainage networks displays non-random components in a variety of landscapes surveyed here, it is only in sites in weak rocks where a strong north-south asymmetry in the density and length of low-order tributaries is observed. Past studies have focused on the role of contrasts in vegetation with aspect in driving asymmetry in channel networks (Istanbulluoglu et al, 2008;McGuire et al, 2014;Yetemen et al, 2015) and these certainly drive differences in landscape evolution. However, using remotely-sensed proxies for vegetation productivity, I demonstrate that all the surveyed sites are formed in climates that favor contrasts in vegetation with aspect.…”
Section: (Steinbeck East Of Eden)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aspect-dependent differences in landscape morphology are not uncommon, and barring tectonic or geologic control are typically attributed to variations in the relative intensity of different geomorphic processes across the microclimatic gradients that arise on opposing slopes due to variations in incoming solar radiation (Bass, 1929;Istanbulluoglu et al, 2008;McGuire et al, 2014;West et al, 2014;Yetemen et al, 2015). Early work was divided on the cause of topographic asymmetry in the Gabilan…”
Section: Geomorphologic Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%
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