Climatic geomorphology

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Atolls like Atafu in Tokelau in the Pacific Ocean are landforms associated to tropical climate. No atoll exists outside the tropics.

Climatic geomorphology is the study of the role of climate in shaping landforms and the earth-surface processes.[1] An approach used in climatic geomorphology is to study relict landforms to infer ancient climates.[1] Being often concerned about past climates climatic geomorphology considered sometimes to be an aspect of historical geology.[2] Since landscape features in one region might have evolved under climates different from those of the present, studying climatically disparate regions might help understand present-day landscapes. For example, Julius Büdel studied both cold-climate processes in Svalbard and weathering processes in tropical India to understand the origin of the relief of Central Europe, which he argued was a palimpsest of landforms formed at different times and under different climates.[3]

Sub-disciplines

The various subbranches of climatic geomorphology focus on specific climatic environments.

Desert geomorphology

Desert geomorphology or the geomorphology of arid and semi-arid lands shares many landforms and processes with more humid regions. One distinctive feature is the sparse or lacking vegetation cover, which influences fluvial and slope processes, related to wind and salt activity.[4] Early work on desert geomorphology was done by Western explorers of the colonies of their respective countries in Africa (French West Africa, German South West Africa, Western Egypt), in frontier regions of their own countries (American West, Australian Outback) or in the deserts of foreign countries such as the Ottoman Empire, the Russian Empire and China .[5] Since the 1970s desert geomorphology in Earth has served to find analogues to Martian landscapes.[6]

Periglacial geomorphology

As a discipline periglacial geomorphology is close but different to Quaternary science and geocryology. Periglacial geomorphology is concerned with non-glacial cold-climate landforms in areas with and without permafrost.[7] Albeit the definition of what a periglacial zone is not clear-cut a conservative estimate is that a quarter of Earth's land surface has periglacial conditions. Beyond this quarter an additional quarter or fifth or Earth's land surface had periglacial conditions at some time during the Pleistocene.[8] In periglacial geomorphology noted researchers include Johan Gunnar Andersson, Walery Łoziński, Anders Rapp and Jean Tricart.[1]

Tropical geomorphology

If the tropics is defined as the area between 35° N and 35° S, then about 60% of Earth's surface lies within this zone.[9] During most of the 20th century tropical geomorphology was neglected due to a bias towards temperate climates, and when dealt with it was highlighted as "exotic".[10] Tropical geomorphology do mainly differ from other areas in the intensities and rates at which surface processes operate, and not by the type of processes.[11] The tropics are characterized by particular climates, that may be dry or humid. Relative to temperate zones the tropics contain areas of high temperatures, high rainfall intensities and high evapotranspiration all of which are climatic features relevant for surface processes.[9] Another characteristic, that is not related to present-day climate per se, is that a large portion of the tropics have a low relief which was inherited from the continent of Gondwana.[12][upper-alpha 1] Julius Büdel, Pierre Birot and Jean Tricart have suggested that tropical rivers are dominated by fine-grained suspended load derived from advanced chemical weathering, and this would make them less erosive than rivers elsewhere. Some landforms previously thought as typically tropical like bornhardts are more related to lithology and rock structure than climate.[10]

Morphoclimatic zones

Yardangs in Lut Desert, Kerman Province, Iran. Deserts constitute undisputed morphoclimatic zones.

Climatic geomorphologists have devised various schemes that divide Earth's surface into various morphoclimatic zones; that is, zones where landforms are associated to present or past climates.[1] However, only some processes and landforms can be associated with particular climates, meaning that they are zonal; processes and landforms not associated with particular climates are labelled azonal.[1] Despite this, azonal processes and landforms might still take on particular characteristics when developing under the influence of particular climates.[13] When identified, morphoclimatic zones do usually lack sharp boundaries and tend to grade from one type to another resulting in that only the core of the zone has all expected attributes. Influential morphoclimatic zoning schemes are those of Julius Büdel (1948, 1963, 1977) and of Jean Tricart and André Cailleux (1965).[1] Büdel's schemes stresses planation and valley-cutting in relation to climate, arguing the valley-cutting is dominant in subpolar regions while planation is so in the tropics. As such this scheme is concerned not only with processes but also with end-products of geomorphic activity. The scheme of Tricart and Cailleux emphasizes the relationship between geomorphology, climate and vegetation.[14] An early attempt at morphoclimatic zoning is that of Albrecht Penck in 1910, who divided Earth in three zones depending on the evaporation-precipitation ratios.[14]

A 1994 review argues that only the concepts of desert, glacial, periglacial and a few coastal[upper-alpha 2] morphoclimatic zones are justified. These zones amounts to about half of Earth's land surface, the remaining half cannot be explained in simple terms by climate-landform interactions.[15] The limitations of morphoclimatic zoning were already discussed by Siegfried Passarge in 1926 who considered vegetation and the extent of weathered material as having more direct impact than climate in many parts of the World.[14] According to M.A. Summerfield large-scale zoning of the relief of Earth's surface is better explained on the basis of plate tectonics than on climate.[3][16] An example of this are the Scandinavian Mountains whose plateau areas and valleys relate to the history of uplift and not to climate.[3]

Piotr Migoń has questioned the validity of certain morphoclimatic zonation schemes since they are named after processes, like planation, that might not occurring at all in large swathes of the zone. Referring to the 1977 scheme of Büdel Migoń states:[3]

Is it really helpful to have the Volcanic Cordillera of Mexico, coastal ranges of southeast Brazil, plains of East Africa, the escarpments of Western Ghats and the mountains of Taiwan in the same zone, labelled as the ‘peritropical zone of excessive planation’?

Morphogenetic zones according to Büdel (1977)[14]
Zone Latitude Example
Glacial zone (and immediately adjacent area) 90–65° N
60–90° S
Greenland, Antarctica
Subpolar zone of excessive valley cutting 80–60° N Canadian Arctic, Taymyr Peninsula
Taiga valley cutting zone, in the permafrost region 70–50° N Russian Far East
Ectropic zone of retarded valley cutting 60–35° N
35–55° S
Most of Europe, Patagonia, Eurasian Steppe
Subtropic zone of mixed relief development, etesian region 40–30° N
30–35° S
Morocco, Syria, Central Chile.
Subtropic zone of mixed relief development, monsoonal region 45–25° N
20–40° S
Uruguay, Eastern Cape, South Korea
Peritropical zone of excessive planation 30° N–30° S Venezuela, Angola, Mozambique, Vietnam
Inter-tropical zone of partial planation 20° N–10° S Panama, Gabon, Sumatra
Warm arid zone of surface preservation and traditionally continued development, largely through fluvio-aeolian sandplains 35–10° N
5–30° S
Atacama, Sahara, Thar, Australian Outback
Winter cold arid zone of surface transformation, largely through pediments and glacis 50–30° N Gobi, Taklamakan, Maranjab

Historical development

During the age of New Imperialism in the late 19th century European explorers and scientists traveled across the globe bringing descriptions of landscapes and landforms. As geographical knowledge increased over time these observations were systematized in a search for regional patterns. Climate emerged thus as prime factor for explaining landform distribution at a grand scale. The rise of climatic geomorphology was foreshadowed by the work of Wladimir Köppen, Vasily Dokuchaev and Andreas Schimper. William Morris Davis, the leading geomorphologist of his time, recognized the role of climate by complementing his "normal" temperate climate cycle of erosion with arid and glacial ones.[15][17] Nevertheless, interest in climatic geomorphology was also a reaction against Davisian geomorphology that was by the mid-20th century considered both un-innovative and dubious.[17][18] Early climatic geomorphology developed primarily in continental Europe, chiefly France and Germany.[15][19] The discipline emerged in the 1940s with works of Carl Troll, Emmanuel de Martonne, Pierre Birot and Julius Büdel.[19] The foundation of climatic geomorphology in Germany lies according to Hanna Bremer in Albrecht Penck, Siegfried Passarge and Alfred Hettner's preference of field observations over theory.[20] Likely it was Büdel, a student of Brückner and Penck,[20] who coined the term "climatic geomorphology".[19] In the English-speaking world the tendency was not explicit until L.C. Peltier's 1950 publication on a periglacial cycle of erosion.[15][19] This was however an isolated work whose theme was not followed up by other English-language authors.[19]

In 1968 came the first English translation of the "continental system" of climatic geomorphology.[19] The following year climatic geomorphology was criticized in a 1969 review article by process geomorphologist D.R. Stoddart.[17][10] The criticism by Stoddart proved "devastating" contributing to a decline in the popularity of climatic geomorphology in the late 20th century.[17][10] Stoddart criticized climatic geomorphology for applying supposedly "trivial" methodologies in establishing landform differences between morphoclimatic zones, being linked to Davisian geomorphology and by allegedly neglecting the fact that physical laws governing processes are the same across the globe.[10] In addition some conceptions of climatic geomorphology, like that which holds that chemical weathering is more rapid in tropical climates than in cold climates proved to not be straightforwardly true.[17] Writing in 1974 Michael Thomas noted works on geomorphology in the tropics were often qualitative and in some cases even "impressionistic", but that there was "a small but growing number of quantitative studies".[21] Another critical view is that of Eiju Yatsu who noted that climatic geomorphology relied much on "good observations which are hard to demonstrate and to learn. Description, mapping, and photos are the means of documentation. These are not easy to reproduce by others in other areas. Thus there is a strong subjective component."[22]

Despite having diminished in importance, climatic geomorphology continues to exist as a field of study producing relevant research. More recently, concerns over global warming have led to a renewed interest in the field.[17]

Notes

  1. See for example the extensive African Surface.
  2. Coral reefs occur only in tropical waters.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 "Climatic Geomorphology". Treatise on Geomorphology. 13. 2013. pp. 115–131. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/285964375. 
  2. Gutiérrez, Mateo, ed (2005). "Chapter 1 Climatic geomorphology". Developments in Earth Surface Processes. 8. pp. 3–32. doi:10.1016/S0928-2025(05)80051-3. ISBN 978-0-444-51794-4. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Migoń, Piotr (2006). "Büdel, J. 1982: Climatic geomorphology. Princeton: Princeton University Press. (Translation of Klima-geomorphologie, Berlin-Stuttgart: Gebrüder Borntraeger, 1977.)". Progress in Physical Geography 30 (1): 99–103. doi:10.1191/0309133306pp473xx. 
  4. Goudie 2013, p. 1
  5. Goudie 2013, pp. 2–4
  6. Goudie 2013, p. 7
  7. French 2007, p. 8
  8. French 2007, pp. 11–13
  9. 9.0 9.1 Gupta 2011, pp. 3–4
  10. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 10.4 Thomas, Michael F. (2004). "Tropical geomorphology". in Goudie, A.S.. Encyclopedia of Geomorphology. pp. 1063–1069. 
  11. Gupta 2011, "Foreword"
  12. Gupta 2011, pp. xiii
  13. French 2007, pp. 248–268
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Sarre, R.D. (1993). "Climatic geomorphology". in Kearey, Philip. The Encyclopedia of the Solid Earth Sciences. Blackwell Science Ltd.. p. 112–114. ISBN 978-0-632-03699-8. https://books.google.com/books?id=6uchDIKQV0UC&q=%22Peritropical+zone+of+excessive+planation%22&pg=PA113. 
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 Twidale, C.R.; Lageat, Y. (1994). "Climatic geomorphology: a critique". Progress in Physical Geography 18 (3): 319–334. doi:10.1177/030913339401800302. 
  16. Summerfield, M.A. (ed.). (2000), Geomorphology and global tectonics, Wiley.
  17. 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 Goudie, A.S. (2004). "Climatic geomorphology". in Goudie, A.S.. Encyclopedia of Geomorphology. pp. 162–164. 
  18. Flemal, Ronald C. (1971). "The Attack on the Davisian System Of Geomorphology: A Synopsis". Journal of Geological Education 19 (1): 3–13. doi:10.5408/0022-1368-XIX.1.3. Bibcode1971JGeoE..19....3F. 
  19. 19.0 19.1 19.2 19.3 19.4 19.5 Young, Anthony (1969). Clayton, K.M.. ed. Slopes. Edinburgh: Oliver & Boyd. pp. 222. 
  20. 20.0 20.1 Bremer, Hanna (1983). "Albrecht Penck (1858-1945) and Walther Penck (1888-1923), two german geomorphologists". Zeitschrift für Geomorphologie 27 (2): 129. 
  21. Thomas, Michael (1974). Tropical Geomorphology. The Macmillan Press Ldt. pp. 136. 
  22. Yatsu, Eiju (2002). Fantasia in Geomorphology. Tokyo: Sozosha. pp. 24. ISBN 4-88156-084-0. 
Bibliography




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