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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The structure and evolution of relict talus accumulations in the Scottish Highlands

Hinchliffe, Simon January 1998 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to establish the evolutionary history of relict talus accumulations in the Scottish Highlands through study of their distribution, morphology, structure and sedimentology, and through dating and pollen analysis of buried soil horizons. Analyses of talus morphology demonstrates that though the investigated slopes comprise a basal concavity and upper straight slope, features hitherto interpreted as characteristic of unmodified rockfall accumulations, there is considerable variability in upper slope gradient. Surface relief indicates widespread reworking by slope failure, gullying and debris flows. Sections through gully-side exposures exhibit up to 3.5 m of stacked debris flow deposits, wash layers and buried soils overlying rockfall deposits, indicating a complex history of sediment reworking. Sedimentological analyses indicate that 27-30% of the talus sediments at one site (Trottemish) comprise fine (< 2 mm) particles representing granular weathering of the rockwall and syndepositional accumulation of both fine and coarse debris. The volume of talus on Trottemish implies an average rockwall retreat rate of c. 0.3 mm yr-1 since deglaciation, of which 0.08-0.09 mm yr-1 reflects granular weathering rather than rockfall. Failure and reworking of talus is inferred to reflect reduced infiltration rates (and high porewater pressures during rainstorms) caused by progressive accumulation of fines. Radiocarbon dating of buried soils indicates that reworking commenced prior to c. 6 cal ka BP, and has been intermittently active during the Holocene. Pollen analyses and charcoal concentration counts provide no evidence for accelerated reworking as a result of anthropogenic interference with vegetation cover, but the timing of reworking events provides support for enhanced activity associated with climatic deterioration after c. 2.7-2.3 cal ka BP. The characteristics of the investigated slopes show that models that treat talus as a free-draining accumulation of rockfall debris have limited applicability, and an alternative model that incorporates progressive reworking by other processes is proposed.

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