Abstract

Abstract. Allometry refers to a physical principle in which geometric (and/or metabolic) characteristics of an object or organism are correlated to its size. Allometric scaling relationships typically manifest as power laws. In geomorphic contexts, scaling relationships are a quantitative signature of organization, structure, or regularity in a landscape, even if the mechanistic processes responsible for creating such a pattern are unclear. Despite the ubiquity and variety of scaling relationships in physical landscapes, the emergence and development of these relationships tend to be difficult to observe – either because the spatial and/or temporal scales over which they evolve are so great or because the conditions that drive them are so dangerous (e.g. an extreme hazard event). Here, we use a physical experiment to examine dynamic allometry in overwash morphology along a model coastal barrier. We document the emergence of a canonical scaling law for length versus area in overwash deposits (washover). Comparing the experimental features, formed during a single forcing event, to 5 decades of change in real washover morphology from the Ria Formosa barrier system, in southern Portugal, we find differences between patterns of morphometric change at the event scale versus longer timescales. Our results may help inform and test process-based coastal morphodynamic models, which typically use statistical distributions and scaling laws to underpin empirical or semi-empirical parameters at fundamental levels of model architecture. More broadly, this work dovetails with theory for landscape evolution more commonly associated with fluvial and alluvial terrain, offering new evidence from a coastal setting that a landscape may reflect characteristics associated with an equilibrium or steady-state condition even when features within that landscape do not.

Highlights

  • In geomorphology, a scaling law is a formalized expression that typically describes how two geometric attributes of a landform relate to each other in a consistent way

  • Geomorphic scaling laws derived from feature dimensions demonstrate allometry: a general physical principle in which geometric characteristics of an object or organism are correlated to its size

  • Previous comparative analysis of field and experimental observations of overwash morphology demonstrated a similarity in morphometric scaling (Lazarus, 2016) but only looked at “final” landform configurations (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

A scaling law is a formalized expression that typically describes how two geometric attributes of a landform relate to each other in a consistent way. The length (L) of a feature relative to its area (A), as in a fluvial drainage basin (Hack, 1957; Montgomery and Dietrich, 1988), is typically expressed as L ∼ Ah, where the scaling exponent h defines the slope of the relationship in log-transform space. Geomorphic scaling laws derived from feature dimensions demonstrate allometry: a general physical principle in which geometric (and/or metabolic) characteristics of an object or organism are correlated to its size. Scaling relationships that describe geomorphic allometry can serve as useful predictive tools, even when the processes behind the patterns are complex or unclear (Shreve, 1966; Kirchner, 1993)

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