Abstract

Watersheds are the fundamental organizing units in landscapes and thus the controls on drainage divide location and mobility are an essential facet of landscape evolution. Additionally, many common topographic analyses fundamentally assume that river network topology and divide locations are largely static, allowing channel profile form to be interpreted in terms of spatio-temporal patterns of rock uplift rate relative to base level, climate, or rock properties. Recently however, it has been suggested that drainage divides are more mobile than previously thought and that divide mobility, and resulting changes in drainage area, could potentially confound interpretations of river profiles. Ultimately, reliable metrics are needed to diagnose the mobility of divides as part of routine landscape analyses. One such recently proposed metric is cross-divide contrasts in χ, a proxy for steady-state channel elevation, but cross-divide contrasts in a number of topographic metrics show promise. Here we use a series of landscape evolution simulations in which we induce divide mobility under different conditions to test the utility of a suite of topographic metrics of divide mobility and for comparison with natural examples in the eastern Greater Caucasus Mountains, the Kars Volcanic Plateau, and the western San Bernadino Mountains. Specifically, we test cross-divide contrasts in mean gradient, mean local relief, channel bed elevation, and χ all measured at, or averaged upstream of, a reference drainage area. Our results highlight that cross-divide contrasts in χ only faithfully reflect current divide mobility when uplift, rock erodibility, climate, and catchment outlet elevation are uniform across both river networks on either side of the divide, otherwise a χ-anomaly only indicates a possible future divide instability. The other metrics appear to be more reliable representations of current divide motion, but in natural landscapes, only cross-divide contrasts in mean gradient and local relief appear to consistently provide useful information. Multiple divide metrics should be considered simultaneously and across-divide values of all metrics examined quantitatively as visual assessment is not sufficiently reliable in many cases. We provide a series of Matlab tools built using TopoToolbox to facilitate routine analysis.

Highlights

  • Drainage divides are fundamental organizing boundaries within landscapes

  • Assessing whether a drainage divide is potentially mobile is important, for quantifying how landscape evolution is affected by the resulting changes in drainage area, and because many of the topographic metrics we use to interpret climatic or tectonic change (e.g., Wobus et al, 2006) assume that drainage area has not changed significantly over the response timescale of a catchment (e.g., Howard, 1988; Kooi and Beaumont, 1996; Whipple, 2001)

  • While recent work suggests that under normal circumstances the rate of divide motion is slow compared to the rate of channel adjustment to drainage area change (Whipple et al, 2017c), the potential importance of drainage divide mobility suggests that assessments of divide stability should be a routine part of topographic analyses

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Summary

10 Abstract

11 12 Watersheds are the fundamental organizing units in landscapes and the controls on drainage divide location and mobility are an essential facet of landscape evolution. Reliable metrics are needed to diagnose the mobility of divides as part of routine landscape analyses. One such recently proposed metric is cross-divide contrasts in c, a proxy for steady-state channel elevation, but cross-divide contrasts in a number of topographic metrics show promise. We test cross-divide contrasts in mean gradient, mean local relief, channel bed elevation, and c all measured at, or averaged upstream of, a reference drainage area. The other metrics appear to be more reliable representations of current divide motion, but in natural landscapes, only cross-divide contrasts in mean gradient and local relief appear to consistently provide useful information. We provide a series of Matlab tools built using TopoToolbox to facilitate routine analysis

Introduction
Theory and Limitations of Metrics
Proposed Methodology for Use of Divide Metrics
Tools for Evaluating Divide Stability
Principles of Metric Interpretation from Simulations
Asymmetric Uplift Simulation
Dipping Hard Layer Simulation
Proposed Usage of Metrics
Eastern Greater Caucasus Mountains
Kars Volcanic Plateau
San Bernadino Mountains
Findings
Discussion and Conclusions
Full Text
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