Abstract

Fans are cone-shaped depositional landforms composed of a mixture of sediments, mainly derived from debris flow processes at the catchment scale. In mountainous terrains located in humid climates, debris flows are fundamental agents of landscape evolution and a highly destructive natural hazard. In the northern Colombian Andes, fans have been traditionally occupied by human settlements, which has also produced a long history of disasters in many settlements located on fans. For example, a debris flow on November 13, 1985, devastated the city of Armero, killing approximately 22,000 people and causing economic losses totaling over $US 339 million. In 2017, the city of Mocoa was affected by a debris flow where 333 people died, 130 houses were destroyed, and 1461 were partially affected. Debris-flow risk is likely to increase as a consequence of the increasing magnitude and frequency of extreme weather and rapid population growth over the past few decades. Hence, identifying fan spatial distribution and debris flow occurrences is important for land use planning. In this study, we implemented geomorphometric analyses in the northern Colombian Andes to understand debris flow occurrence in terms of landscape evolution. Using digital elevation models, fan inventory, morphometric parameters, and geomorphic indices associated with the drainage network at the catchment scale, the close interconnection between debris-flow hazards and landscape evolution is explained. The results show a clear spatial pattern of fans location and debris-flow-prone basins with knickpoint upstream migration and transient-state catchments, those characterized by high values of Ksn, hypsometric index and constraint values of

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