EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features,...

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EART163 Planetary Surfaces Francis Nimmo

Transcript of EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features,...

Page 1: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

EART163 Planetary Surfaces

Francis Nimmo

Page 2: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Last Week - Wind • Sediment transport

– Initiation of motion – friction velocity v*, threshold

grain size dt, turbulence and viscosity

– Sinking - terminal velocity

– Motion of sand-grains – saltation, sand flux, dune

motion

• Aeolian landforms and what they tell us

g

vCq

f

s

3*

3/12

)(10

gd

fsf

t

tf dv

5.3*

Page 3: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

This week – “Water”

• Only three bodies: Earth, Mars, Titan

• Subsurface water – percolation, sapping

• Surface flow

– Water discharge rates

– Sediment transport – initiation, mechanisms, rates

• Channels

• Fluvial landscapes

Page 4: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Caveats

1. “Most geologic work is done by large, infrequent events”

2. Almost all sediment transport laws are empirical

Page 5: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Subsurface Flow • On Earth, there is a water table below which the

pores are occupied by fluid

• This fluid constitutes a reservoir which can recharge

rivers (and is drained by wells)

• Surface flow happens if infiltration into the

subsurface is exceeded by the precipitation rate

Page 6: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Flow in a permeable medium

vd

vd

dx

dPk

L

Hg

kv fd

vd is the Darcy velocity (m/s)

k is the permeability (m2)

is the viscosity (Pa s), typical

value for water is 10-3 Pa s

• Darcy velocity is the average flow velocity of fluid through

the medium (not the flow velocity through the pores)

• Permeability controls how fast fluid can flow through the

medium – intrinsic property of the rock.

• Permeable flows are almost always low Reynolds numbers –

so what?

Page 7: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Permeability and porosity

• Permeability can vary widely

• Porosity is the volume fraction of rock occupied by voids

• High porosity usually implies high permeability

Rock type Permeability (m2)

Gravel 10-9 – 10-7

Loose sand 10-11 – 10-9

Permeable basalt 10-13 – 10-8

Fractured crystalline rock 10-14 – 10-11

Sandstone 10-16 – 10-12

Limestone* 10-18 – 10-16

Intact granite 10-20 – 10-18

* Permeability can be highly scale-dependent! (e.g. fractures)

Page 8: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Porosity and permeability

Grain size 2b, pore diameter 2a

A unit cell includes 3 pore cylinders

2

2

4

3

b

a Porosity ( ):

18

22bk Permeability (k):

a

• Permeability increases with grain size b and porosity

• E.g. 1mm grain size, porosity 1% implies k~2x10-12 m2

• Porosity-permeability relationship is also important for

compaction timescale (Week 4)

Page 9: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Response timescale

• If the water table is disturbed, the response timescale

depends on the permeability

• The hydraulic diffusivity (m2s-1) of the water table is

Pk

hyd

k is permeability, is viscosity, P is the pressure perturbation

• Knowing allows us to calculate the time t it takes a

disturbance to propagate a distance d: t=d2/

• Example: a well draws down the local water table by

10 m. If it takes 1 year for this disturbance to

propagate 1 km, what value of k/ is implied?

Does this make sense?

Page 10: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

When does subsurface flow matter?

• Subsurface flow is generally very slow compared to

surface flow, so it does much less geological work

• But at least on present-day Mars, water is not stable at

the surface, while it is stable in the subsurface.

• So subsurface flow may matter on Mars.

• On Earth, it matters in regions with high permeability

where the rock is soluble (e.g. limestone or chalk)

• Titan may also have regions where “rock” dissolution

is important?

Page 11: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Groundwater sapping on Mars?

Lamb et al. 2008

Do blunt amphitheatres necessarily indicate groundwater sapping?

Or might they be a sign of ancient surface runoff?

Page 12: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Sediment transport

• At low velocities, bed-load dominates (saltation +

traction + rotation)

• At intermediate velocities/low grain sizes, suspended

load can be important

• At high velocities, entire bed moves (washload)

• Solution load is usually minor

Page 13: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Sediment Transport • A column of water on a slope exerts a shear stress t

• This stress will drive fluid motion

h

d

a

at singhf

f

• If the fluid motion is

rapid enough, it can also

overcome gravity +

cohesion and cause

sediment transport

• The shear stress t is a

useful measure of

whether sediment

transport is likely

Page 14: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Transport Initiation • Just like aeolian transport, we can define a friction

velocity u* which is related to the shear stress t

• The friction velocity u*=(t/f )1/2=(gh sin a)1/2

2/12/1

2/1

*

gdu

f

fs

crit

• The critical friction velocity required to initiate

sediment transport depends on the grain size d

• The dimensionless constant is a function of u* and d

and is a measure of how hard it is to initiate movement.

• A typical value of is 0.1 (see next page)

Does this equation

make sense? Balance

turbulent stress

against gravity.

Page 15: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Shields Curve

=0.05-0.2

Sediment

transport

harder

Small grains

Low velocities

Large grains

High velocities

Minimum grain size

(as with aeolian transport)

Page 16: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Transport initiation

Burr et al. 2006

Slope=0.001

Easiest on Titan – why?

d1/2 –

grain size

d2 - terminal velocity?

Page 17: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Water and sediment discharge

asin1 2/3 ghf

qw

w

fs

f

s

s ghf

q

a

2/122/3 )(sin

1

Water discharge rate (m2s-1) is well-established and depends on

dimensionless friction factor fw:

Sediment discharge rate (m2s-1) is not well-established. The

formula below is most suitable for steep slopes. It also depends on

a dimensionless friction factor fs:

The friction factors are empirical but are typically ~0.05

Page 18: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Worked example: cobbles on Titan

d=10cm so u*=11 cm/s (for =0.1)

u*=(gh sin a)1/2 so h=9 m (for sin a

= 0.001)

Fluid flux = 20 m2s-1

For a channel (say) 100m wide,

discharge rate = 2000 m3/s

Catchment area of say 400 km2,

rainfall rate 18 mm/h

Comments?

2/12/1

2/1

*

gdu

f

fs

crit

30 km

g=1.3 ms-2, f=500 kgm-3, s=1000 kgm-3

fw=0.05

asin1 2/3 ghf

qw

w

Page 19: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Braided vs. Meandering Channels

Image 2.3 km wide. Why are the

meanders high-standing?

• Braided channels are more common at high slopes and/or high

discharge rates (and therefore coarse sediment load – why?)

• Meanders seem to require cohesive sediment to form – due to

clays or plants on Earth, and clays or ice on Mars

Page 20: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Meanders on Venus (!)

Image width 50 km

• Presumably very low viscosity lava

• Some channels extend for >1000 km

• Channels do not always flow “down-stream” – why?

Page 21: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Fluvial landscapes

• Valley networks on Mars

• Only occur on ancient terrain (~4 Gyr old)

• What does this imply about ancient Martian atmosphere?

30 km

• Valley network on Titan

• Presumably formed by methane runoff

• What does this imply about Titan climate and surface?

100 km

Page 22: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Fluvial Landscapes

Stepinksi and Stepinski 2006

• Martian networks resemble those of the Earth, suggesting prolonged lifetime – clement climate?

Page 23: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Landscape Evolution Models

Page 24: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

• Large-scale fluvial features,

indicating massive (liquid) flows,

comparable to ocean currents on

Earth

• Morphology similar to giant post-

glacial floods on Earth

• Spread throughout Martian history,

but concentrated in the first 1-2

Gyr of Martian history

• Source of water unknown –

possibly ice melted by volcanic

eruptions (jokulhaups)?

Martian Outflow channels

50km

flow

direction

150km

Baker (2001)

Page 25: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Erosion & Exhumation • Erosion (aeolian?) is recognized as a major process on Mars,

but the details are still extremely poorly understood

• The images below show examples of fluvial features which

have apparently been exhumed: the channels are highstanding.

Why?

• These exhumed meanders are attractive targets for future Mars

sample return missions

Malin and Edgett, Science 2003

meander

channel

Page 26: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Martian Gullies • A very unexpected discovery

(Malin & Edgett, Science 283, 2330-2335, 2000)

• Found predominantly at high latitudes (>30o), on pole-facing slopes, and shallow (~100m below surface)

• Inferred to be young – cover young features like dunes and polygons

• How do we explain them? Liquid water is not stable at the surface!

• Maybe even active at present day?

Page 27: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Alluvial Fans

Schon et al. 2009

• Consequence of a sudden change in slope – sediment gets dumped out

• Fans can eventually merge along-strike to form a continuous surface – a bajada

Page 28: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Martian sediments in outcrop

Opportunity (Meridiani)

Cross-bedding indicative of prolonged fluid flows

Page 29: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Lakes

Titan, 140km across (false colour)

Gusev, Mars

150km

Clearwater Lakes Canada

~30km diameters

Titan lakes are (presumably)

methane/ethane and occur mainly near

the poles – why?

How do we know they are liquid-filled?

Gusev crater shows little evidence for

water, based on Mars Rover data

Page 30: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

Summary

• Subsurface water – percolation, sapping

• Surface flow

– Water discharge rates

– Sediment transport – initiation, mechanisms, rates

• Channels – braided vs. meandering

• Fluvial landscapes

dx

dPkvd

P

khyd

2/12/1

2/1

*

gdu

f

fs

crit

asin* ghu

Page 31: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

T

d

L

Water

table

Aquifer

Page 32: EART163 Planetary Surfacesfnimmo/eart163/Week9-Fluvial.pdf · •Large-scale fluvial features, indicating massive (liquid) flows, comparable to ocean currents on Earth •Morphology

1.25 km

h