Abstract

In the northern hemisphere within snow-dominated mountainous watersheds north-facing slopes are commonly more deeply weathered than south-facing slopes. This has been attributed to a more persistent snowpack on the north facing aspects. A persistent snowpack releases its water into the subsurface in a single large pulse, which propagates the water deeper into the subsurface than the series of small pulses characteristic of the intermittent snowpack on south-facing slopes. Johnston Draw is an east-draining catchment in the Reynolds Creek Critical Zone Observatory, Idaho that spans a 300 m elevation gradient. The north-facing slope hosts a persistent snowpack that increases in volume up drainage, while the south-facing slope has intermittent snowpack throughout the drainage. We hypothesize that the largest difference in weathering depth between the two aspects will occur where the difference in snow accumulation between the aspects is also greatest. To test this hypothesis, we conducted four seismic refraction tomography surveys within Johnston Draw from inlet to outlet and perpendicular to drainage direction. From these measurements, we calculate the weathering zone thickness from the P-wave velocity profiles. We conclude that the maximum difference in weathering between aspects occurs ¾ of the way up the drainage from the outlet, where the difference in snow accumulation is highest. Above and below this point, the subsurface is more equally weathered and the snow accumulations are more similar. We also observed that the thickness of the weathering zone increased with decreasing elevation and interpret this to be related to the observed increase soil moisture at lower elevations. Our observations support the hypothesis that deeper snow accumulation leads to deeper weathering when all other variables are held equal. One caveat is the possibility that the denser vegetation contributes to deeper weathering on north-facing slopes via soil retention or higher rates of biological weathering.

Highlights

  • The critical zone (CZ) extends from bedrock to the top of the tree canopy, it is where bedrock is weathered into soil (White et al, 2015)

  • The portion of the seismic profile underlying sub-catchment B is excluded from this analysis, as it accumulates meteoric water that does not contribute to the weathering of the hillslopes within Johnston Draw

  • Later we discuss that the weathering zone under sub-catchment B is anomalously deep and is likely caused by a pre-existing weakness, so its inclusion in the analysis would introduce a control on weathering other than aspect, elevation, and snow accumulation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The critical zone (CZ) extends from bedrock to the top of the tree canopy, it is where bedrock is weathered into soil (White et al, 2015). This transformation encompasses intricate interactions of physical, chemical, and biological processes that lead to structural and compositional heterogeneity both vertically and laterally. Some of these factors vary with aspect and elevation, i.e., climate, hydrology, and biology. We investigate the effects of elevation, aspect, and snow accumulation on CZ structure using seismic methods in an east-draining catchment

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call