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GeoRef Categories
Book Series
Date
Availability
Rainfall Triggering of Post-Fire Debris Flows over a 28-Year Period near El Portal, California, USA Available to Purchase
Rainfall Thresholds for Post-Fire Debris-Flow Generation, Western Sierra Nevada, CA Available to Purchase
Time Since Burning and Rainfall Characteristics Impact Post-Fire Debris-Flow Initiation and Magnitude Available to Purchase
The influence of vegetation on debris-flow initiation during extreme rainfall in the northern Colorado Front Range Available to Purchase
Evolution of a natural debris flow: In situ measurements of flow dynamics, video imagery, and terrestrial laser scanning Available to Purchase
Chalk Creek Valley: Colorado’s natural debris-flow laboratory Available to Purchase
Abstract Recent debris flow studies in Colorado indicate that the state is most susceptible to debris flows that initiate from surface-water runoff that erodes and entrains hillslope and channel sediment. These runoff-initiated debris flows grow in size by entraining sediment along travel paths, thereby increasing their destructive potential. Yet, the mechanics of initiation, erosion, and entrainment processes for runoff-initiated debris flows are poorly understood. The steep, bedrock-dominated flanks of the formerly glaciated Chalk Creek Valley near Nathrop, Colorado, generate an average of two runoff-initiated debris flows per year, making the valley an ideal natural laboratory for debris-flow research. This two-day field trip to the Chalk Creek Valley will examine debris-flow initiation areas, transport zones, deposits, and the impact of large pulses of debris-flow sediment on the morphology of Chalk Creek. On the first day, participants will hike into a particularly active basin at Chalk Cliffs where debris flows are being monitored by the U.S. Geological Survey, the University of Colorado, and East Carolina University. The second day will focus on debris-flow deposits in Chalk Creek and on recent debris flows in and near the community of Alpine in the central part of the valley.