SCEC Award Number 15209 View PDF
Proposal Category Individual Proposal (Integration and Theory)
Proposal Title Modeling clast lifetimes: A new approach to cosmogenic dating of alluvial fan surfaces
Investigator(s)
Name Organization
Michael Oskin University of California, Davis
Other Participants Veronica Prush
SCEC Priorities SCEC Groups Geology, SoSAFE, Seismology
Report Due Date 03/15/2016 Date Report Submitted 05/18/2016
Project Abstract
Quantifying Quaternary fault slip rates requires constraints on the age of offset geomorphic sur- faces. One commonly used technique is surface exposure age-dating of sedimentary deposits, such as alluvial fans, with cosmogenic nuclides (CNs), such as Beryllium-10 (10Be). However, the ac- cumulation of 10Be begins prior the formation of sediment, as rocks are exhumed to the surface. Age determinations can be skewed by the effects of this inherited component, which can result in clast ages that appear older the true age of the surface. Often, individual clast ages are assumed to follow a normal distribution, and outliers are commonly removed by visual inspection (e.g Frankel et al., 2011) or a statistical criterion (for example, Chauvenet’s criterion (Me ́riaux et al., 2012)). We find that the assumption of a normal distribution of clast ages is incorrect, and propose that the appropriate distribution is a generalized pareto (GPD) distribution, commonly employed for modeling of extreme values. We have developed an analytical model for the distribution of surface clast inheritance based on landslide statistics of a source catchment. We are continuing to develop a numerical algorithm to determine the age of a surface using our model. The analytical model and an open-source algorithm to be applied to surface exposure age determined from clasts will be provided in a forthcoming publication.
Intellectual Merit Techniques for surface dating using cosmogenic nuclides (CNs), such as Beryllium-10 (10Be), have developed significantly over the past ∼30 years (Lal, 1991; Morris, 1991; Anderson et al., 1996; Repka et al., 1997; Gosse and Phillips, 2001; Balco et al., 2008; Hidy et al., 2010). Despite the in- creasingly common use of CN dating methods, standardized approaches for quantifying the effects of inheritance remain elusive. Common approaches for determining inheritance include excavating pits to constrain the exponential falloff in CN production with depth (Anderson et al., 1996) and sampling sediments in an active channel to obtain catchment-wide estimates of inheritance (Repka et al., 1997). Treatment of inheritance in datasets composed of individual clasts collected from a surface commonly involves removing outliers, either by visual inspection (e.g. Frankel et al., 2011) or using a statistical rationale, such as Chauvenet’s criterion (e.g. Me ́riaux et al., 2012). Numerous studies acknowledge that assumptions of Gaussian behavior for the statistical distribution of such datasets, evaluated using a variety of goodness-of-fit statistics, are not valid (e.g. Hidy et al., 2010). Landslides have been suggested as one factor contributing to the skewed statistical distribution of these datasets (e.g. McPhillips et al., 2014; Niemi et al., 2005; Yanites et al., 2009). We have devel- oped a model that builds on previous work (Niemi et al., 2005; Yanites et al., 2009) to predict the distribution of inherited 10Be concentrations in cobble and boulder samples from a surface deposit sourced from a landslide-dominated catchment. Our analytical model suggests that a generalized pareto distribution (GPD), rather than a normal distribution, provides a more appropriate fit to the distribution of cobble ages from geomorphic surfaces reported in many publications. This model will allow for more accurate determinations of surfaces age, and will have implications for any geomorphic study of surface age using in-situ produced CNs. These results are particularly impor- tant for determinations of fault slip rate, where an over- or underestimate of surface age will result in a slip rate biased towards lower or higher values, respectively. Incorrect interpretation of these results can have far-reaching consequences, particularly for seismic hazard, which is determined in large part on estimates of fault slip rate over Quaternary timescales. We are continuing to work on developing what will be an open-source algorithm for determining the error bounds on surface age using our model.
Broader Impacts The distribution of inheritance values reveals information on the frequency of landslides in a source catchment and the balance between landslide-driven versus background steady erosion. These parameters are of interest to the broader research community beyond earthquake science, and could have additional societal impact for predicting sediment flux and landslide hazards.
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