Abstract
The accumulation of thousands of boulder-sized clasts into boulder fields in the Atacama Desert has been linked to seismic-driven downslope transport, a rare sedimentary process corroborated by this study. We surveyed boulder arrangements occurring in the Atacama Desert and identified three accumulation types for further investigation: a small circular boulder cluster (BC), a long channelized boulder stream (BS), and a wide convex-shaped boulder field (BF). Drone-based photogrammetric techniques and field observations were used to generate high-quality digital elevation models and orthophotos to determine boulder count, size, coverage, orientation, lithology and local topography. Our data shows that the arrangement of boulder accumulations corresponds with the shape of the accommodation space and the boulder input, where BCs occur at the center of completely confined topographic depressions, BSs occur along laterally confined and incised hill slopes with boulders stacked above each other, and BFs occur on largely unconfined shallow and low-relief slopes with a distinct boulder front. A general downslope increase of average boulder size and coverage was measured in all boulder accumulations and a long-axis orientation of boulders parallel to the transport direction was observed for the BS. Based on these results and the lack of fluvial transport indicators, we conclude that transport and arrangement of boulder accumulations are largely controlled by the interplay of topography and seismic-driven boulder transport, resulting in unique landscape features present in the hyper-arid Atacama Desert. Such sedimentary transport processes are rare on Earth but potentially play a greater role on other arid planetary surfaces that are covered by boulders and subject to sufficient seismic activity.
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