2018
DOI: 10.1002/esp.4432
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Effects of debris‐flow magnitude–frequency distribution on avulsions and fan development

Abstract: Shifts in the active channel on a debris-flow fan, termed avulsions, pose a large threat because new channels can bypass mitigation measures and cause damage to settlements and infrastructure. Recent, but limited, field evidence suggests that avulsion processes and tendency may depend on the flow-size distribution, which is difficult to constrain in the field. Here, we investigate how the flow magnitude-frequency distribution and the associated flow-magnitude sequences affect avulsion on debris-flow fans. We c… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Because of the large length scale required to simulate the 3D evolution of fans within a reasonable time‐frame and spatial extent, similarity‐of‐process models (“analogue models”) have become the established norm in laboratory studies of fans and fan‐deltas (e.g. Bryant et al, 1995; Clarke et al, 2010; Davies & Korup, 2007; de Haas et al 2016; de Haas et al, 2018; Hamilton et al, 2013; Hooke, 1967; Hooke, 1968b; Hooke & Rohrer, 1979; Miller et al, 2019; Piliouras et al, 2017; Reitz & Jerolmack, 2012; Schumm et al, 1987; Van Dijk et al, 2009). A similarity‐of‐process model is one that reproduces key aspects of the morphology of the generic “prototype”; importantly, the processes that shape this morphology in the model can reasonably be assumed to do so in the field.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of the large length scale required to simulate the 3D evolution of fans within a reasonable time‐frame and spatial extent, similarity‐of‐process models (“analogue models”) have become the established norm in laboratory studies of fans and fan‐deltas (e.g. Bryant et al, 1995; Clarke et al, 2010; Davies & Korup, 2007; de Haas et al 2016; de Haas et al, 2018; Hamilton et al, 2013; Hooke, 1967; Hooke, 1968b; Hooke & Rohrer, 1979; Miller et al, 2019; Piliouras et al, 2017; Reitz & Jerolmack, 2012; Schumm et al, 1987; Van Dijk et al, 2009). A similarity‐of‐process model is one that reproduces key aspects of the morphology of the generic “prototype”; importantly, the processes that shape this morphology in the model can reasonably be assumed to do so in the field.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of the large length scale required to simulate the 3D evolution of fans within a reasonable time-frame and spatial extent, similarity-of-process models ("analogue models") have become the established norm in laboratory studies of fans and fan-deltas (e.g. Bryant et al, 1995;Clarke et al, 2010;Davies and Korup, 2007;Van Dijk et al, 2009;de Haas et al, 2016;de Haas, Kruijt and Densmore, 2018;Hamilton et al, 2013;Hooke, 1967Hooke, , 1968bHooke and Rohrer, 1979;Miller et al, 2019;Piliouras et al, 2017;Reitz and Jerolmack, 2012;Schumm et al, 1987). A similarity-of-process model is one that reproduces key aspects of the morphology of the generic "prototype"; importantly, the processes that shape this morphology in the model can reasonably be assumed to do so in the field.…”
Section: Similarity-of-process Modelingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Owing to their moderate surface gradients and relatively low frequency of activity, debris‐flow fans are preferred sites for settlements in mountainous areas (e.g., Jakob, ), and debris flows therefore pose a large threat to people, settlements, and infrastructure (e.g., Dowling & Santi, ; Iverson, ; Wieczorek et al, ). Debris‐flow avulsions can be particularly dangerous, because mitigation measures in the active channel may not be able to reduce risk on other areas of the fan after avulsion (De Haas, Densmore, et al, ; De Haas, Kruijt, et al, ; Pederson et al, ). In addition, debris‐flow fan deposits are archives of past flow processes (e.g., De Haas, Braat, et al,; Dühnforth et al, ; Whipple & Dunne, ) and sediment supply (e.g., Dietrich & Krautblatter, ; Franke et al, ; McDonald et al, ), and they may therefore record sedimentary signals of past climate changes (e.g., D'Arcy et al, ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Second, the average locus of debris‐flow deposition gradually shifts toward topographically lower parts on a fan over longer, but poorly constrained, time scales that are on the order of tens of events (De Haas, Densmore, et al, ). Limited observations on natural debris‐flow fans (De Haas, Densmore, et al, ; Suwa & Okuda, ; Suwa et al, ) and physical scale experiments (De Haas, Kruijt, et al, ) show that there is a strong relationship between avulsion occurrence and the sequence of flow sizes. In general, following the formation of a channel plug, small‐ to medium‐sized debris flows leave deposits that step back sequentially toward the fan apex, until an event occurs that is sufficiently large to overtop these deposits and avulse out of the active channel.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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