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Scree

Scree is a collection of broken rock fragments at the base of a cliff or other steep rocky mass that has accumulated through periodic rockfall. Landforms associated with these materials are often called talus deposits. Talus deposits typically have a concave upwards form, where the maximum inclination corresponds to the angle of repose of the mean debris particle size. The exact definition of scree in the primary literature is somewhat relaxed, and it often overlaps with both talus and colluvium.[1]

Talus at the bottom of Mount Yamnuska, Alberta, Canada.

The term scree comes from the Old Norse term for landslide, skriða,[2] while the term talus is a French word meaning a slope or embankment.[3][4]

In high-altitude arctic and subarctic regions, scree slopes and talus deposits are typically adjacent to hills and river valleys. These steep slopes usually originate from late-Pleistocene periglacial processes.[5] Notable scree sites in Eastern North America include the Ice Caves at White Rocks National Recreation Area in southern Vermont and Ice Mountain in eastern West Virginia[6] in the Appalachian Mountains. Screes are most abundant in the PyreneesAlps, Variscan, Apennine, Orocantabrian, and Carpathian Mountains, Iberian peninsula, and Northern Europe.[7]

Description edit

The term scree is applied both to an unstable steep mountain slope composed of rock fragments and other debris, and to the mixture of rock fragments and debris itself.[8][9][10] It is loosely synonymous with talus, material that accumulates at the base of a projecting mass of rock,[9][11] or talus slope, a landform composed of talus.[12] The term scree is sometimes used more broadly for any sheet of loose rock fragments mantling a slope, while talus is used more narrowly for material that accumulates at the base of a cliff or other rocky slope from which it has obviously eroded.[9]

Scree is formed by rockfall,[10][13] which distinguishes it from colluvium. Colluvium is rock fragments or soil that is deposited by rainwash, sheetwash, or slow downhill creep, usually at the base of gentle slopes or hillsides.[14] However, the terms scree, talus,[9][10] and sometimes colluvium[1] tend to be used interchangeably. The term talus deposit is sometimes used to distinguish the landform from the material of which it is made.[15]

Scree slopes are often assumed to be close to the angle of repose. This is the slope at which a pile of granular material becomes mechanically unstable. However, careful examination of scree slopes shows that only those that are either rapidly accumulating new material, or are experiencing rapid removal of material from their bases, are close to the angle of repose. Most scree slopes are less steep, and they often show a concave shape, so that the foot of the slope is less steep than the top of the slope.[16][17]

Formation edit

 
Talus cones on north shore of Isfjord, Svalbard, Norway.

The formation of scree and talus deposits is the result of physical and chemical weathering acting on a rock face, and erosive processes transporting the material downslope.

There are five main stages of scree slope evolution: (1) accumulation, (2) consolidation, (3) weathering, (4) encroaching vegetation, and finally, (5) slope degradation.

Scree slopes form as a result of accumulated loose, coarse-grained material. Within the scree slope itself, however, there is generally good sorting of sediment by size: larger particles accumulate more rapidly at the bottom of the slope.[18] Cementation occurs as fine-grained material fills in gaps between debris. The speed of consolidation depends on the composition of the slope; clayey components will bind debris together faster than sandy ones. Should weathering outpace the supply of sediment, plants may take root. Plant roots diminish cohesive forces between the coarse and fine components, degrading the slope.[19] The predominant processes that degrade a rock slope depend largely on the regional climate (see below), but also on the thermal and topographic stresses governing the parent rock material. Example process domains include:

Physical weathering processes edit

 
Scree in the lower part of the Mai Valley on the Aurouze mountain (Hautes-Alpes, France).

Scree formation is commonly attributed to the formation of ice within mountain rock slopes. The presence of joints, fractures, and other heterogeneities in the rock wall can allow precipitation, groundwater, and surface runoff to flow through the rock. If the temperature drops below the freezing point of the fluid contained within the rock, during particularly cold evenings, for example, this water can freeze. Since water expands by 9% when it freezes, it can generate large forces that either create new cracks or wedge blocks into an unstable position. Special boundary conditions (rapid freezing and water confinement) may be required for this to happen.[20] Freeze-thaw scree production is thought to be most common during the spring and fall, when the daily temperatures fluctuate around the freezing point of water, and snow melt produces ample free water.

The efficiency of freeze-thaw processes in scree production is a subject of ongoing debate. Many researchers believe that ice formation in large open fracture systems cannot generate high enough pressures to force the fracturing apart of parent rocks, and instead suggest that the water and ice simply flow out of the fractures as pressure builds.[21] Many argue that frost heaving, like that known to act in soil in permafrost areas, may play an important role in cliff degradation in cold places.[22][23]

Eventually, a rock slope may be completely covered by its own scree, so that production of new material ceases. The slope is then said to be "mantled" with debris. However, since these deposits are still unconsolidated, there is still a possibility of the deposit slopes themselves failing. If the talus deposit pile shifts and the particles exceed the angle of repose, the scree itself may slide and fail.

Chemical weathering processes edit

Phenomena such as acid rain may also contribute to the chemical degradation of rocks and produce more loose sediments.

Biotic weathering processes edit

Biotic processes often intersect with both physical and chemical weathering regimes, as the organisms that interact with rocks can mechanically or chemically alter them.

Lichen frequently grow on the surface of, or within, rocks. Particularly during the initial colonization process, the lichen often inserts its hyphae into small fractures or mineral cleavage planes that exist in the host rock.[24] As the lichen grows, the hyphae expand and force the fractures to widen. This increases the potential of fragmentation, possibly leading to rockfalls. During the growth of the lichen thallus, small fragments of the host rock can be incorporated into the biological structure and weaken the rock.

Freeze-thaw action of the entire lichen body due to microclimatic changes in moisture content can alternately cause thermal contraction and expansion,[24] which also stresses the host rock. Lichen also produce a number of organic acids as metabolic byproducts.[24] These often react with the host rock, dissolving minerals, and breaking down the substrate into unconsolidated sediments.

Interactions with surrounding landscape edit

Scree often collects at the base of glaciers, concealing them from their environment. For example, Lech dl Dragon, in the Sella group of the Dolomites, is derived from the melting waters of a glacier and is hidden under a thick layer of scree. Debris cover on a glacier affects the energy balance and, therefore, the melting process.[25][26] Whether the glacier ice begins melting more rapidly or more slowly is determined by the thickness of the layer of scree on its surface.

The amount of energy reaching the surface of the ice below the debris can be estimated via the one-dimensional, homogeneous material assumption of Fourier's Law:[26]

 ,

where k is the thermal conductivity of the debris material, Ts is the ambient temperature above the debris surface, Ti is the temperature at the lower surface of the debris, and d is the thickness of the debris layer.

 
Scree-covered glacier, Lech dl Dragon, Italy

Debris with a low thermal conductivity value, or a high thermal resistivity, will not efficiently transfer energy through to the glacier, meaning the amount of heat energy reaching the ice surface is substantially lessened. This can act to insulate the glacier from incoming radiation.

The albedo, or the ability of a material to reflect incoming radiation energy, is also an important quality to consider. Generally, the debris will have a lower albedo than the glacier ice it covers, and will thus reflect less incoming solar radiation. Instead, the debris will absorb radiation energy and transfer it through the cover layer to the debris-ice interface.

If the ice is covered by a relatively thin layer of debris (less than around 2 centimeters thick), the albedo effect is most important.[27] As scree accumulates atop the glacier, the ice's albedo will begin to decrease. Instead, the glacier ice will absorb incoming solar radiation and transfer it to the upper surface of the ice. Then, the glacier ice begins to absorb the energy and uses it in the process of melting.

However, once the debris cover reaches 2 or more centimeters in thickness, the albedo effect begins to dissipate.[27] Instead, the debris blanket will act to insulate the glacier, preventing incoming radiation from penetrating the scree and reaching the ice surface.[27] In addition to rocky debris, thick snow cover can form an insulating blanket between the cold winter atmosphere and subnivean spaces in screes.[28] As a result, soil, bedrock, and also subterranean voids in screes do not freeze at high elevations.

Microclimates edit

A scree has many small interstitial voids, while an ice cave has a few large hollows. Due to cold air seepage and air circulation, the bottom of scree slopes have a thermal regime similar to ice caves.

Because subsurface ice is separated from the surface by thin, permeable sheets of sediment, screes experience cold air seepage from the bottom of the slope where sediment is thinnest.[6] This freezing circulating air maintains internal scree temperatures 6.8-9.0 °C colder than external scree temperatures.[29] These <0 °C thermal anomalies occur up to 1000m below sites with mean annual air temperatures of 0 °C.

Patchy permafrost, which forms under conditions <0 °C, probably exists at the bottom of some scree slopes despite mean annual air temperatures of 6.8–7.5 °C.[29]

Biodiversity edit

During the last glacial period, a narrow ice-free corridor formed in the Scandinavian ice sheet,[30] introducing taiga species to the terrain. These boreal plants and animals still live in modern alpine and subarctic tundra, as well as high-altitude coniferous forests and mires.[31][32]

Scree microclimates maintained by circulating freezing air create microhabitats that support taiga plants and animals that could not otherwise survive regional conditions.[6]

A Czech Republic Academy of Sciences research team led by physical chemist Vlastimil Růžička, analyzing 66 scree slopes, published a paper in Journal of Natural History in 2012, reporting that: "This microhabitat, as well as interstitial spaces between scree blocks elsewhere on this slope, supports an important assemblage of boreal and arctic bryophytes, pteridophytes, and arthropods that are disjunct from their normal ranges far to the north. This freezing scree slope represents a classic example of a palaeo refugium that significantly contributes to [the] protection and maintenance of regional landscape biodiversity."[6]

Ice Mountain, a massive scree in West Virginia, supports distinctly different distributions of plant and animal species than northern latitudes.[6]

Scree running edit

Scree running is the activity of running down a scree slope; which can be very quick, as the scree moves with the runner. Some scree slopes are no longer possible to run, because the stones have been moved towards the bottom.[33][34][35]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Landslides : investigation and mitigation. Turner, A. Keith, 1941-, Schuster, Robert L. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. 1996. ISBN 0-309-06208-X. OCLC 33102185.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. ^ Harper, Douglas. "scree". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2006-04-20.
  3. ^ Harper, Douglas. "talus". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 2008-12-01.
  4. ^ "Talus". bab.la language portal. Retrieved 2011-12-10.
  5. ^ Růžička, Vlastimil; Hajer, Jaromír (1996-12-01). "Spiders (Araneae) of stony debris in North Bohemia". Arachnologische Mitteilungen. 12: 46–56. doi:10.5431/aramit1202. ISSN 1018-4171.
  6. ^ a b c d e Růžička, Vlastimil; Zacharda, Miloslav; Němcová, Lenka; Šmilauer, Petr; Nekola, Jeffrey C. (September 2012). "Periglacial microclimate in low-altitude scree slopes supports relict biodiversity". Journal of Natural History. 46 (35–36): 2145–2157. doi:10.1080/00222933.2012.707248. ISSN 0022-2933. S2CID 86730753.
  7. ^ Valachovič, Milan; Dierssen, Klaus; Dimopoulos, Panayotis; Hadač, Emil; Loidi, Javier; Mucina, Ladislav; Rossi, Graziano; Tendero, Francisco Valle; Tomaselli, Marcello (June 1997). "The vegetation on screes—A synopsis of higher syntaxa in Europe". Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica. 32 (2): 173–192. doi:10.1007/BF02803739. ISSN 0015-5551. S2CID 223142.
  8. ^ "scree". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  9. ^ a b c d Jackson, Julia A., ed. (1997). "scree". Glossary of geology (Fourth ed.). Alexandria, Virginia: American Geological Institute. ISBN 0922152349.
  10. ^ a b c Allaby, Michael (2013). "scree". A dictionary of geology and earth sciences (Fourth ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199653065.
  11. ^ Jackson 1997, "talus".
  12. ^ Thornbury, William D. (1969). Principles of geomorphology (2d ed.). New York: Wiley. p. 66. ISBN 0471861979.
  13. ^ Blatt, Harvey; Middleton, Gerard; Murray, Raymond (1980). Origin of sedimentary rocks (2d ed.). Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. p. 176. ISBN 0136427103.
  14. ^ Jackson 1997, "colluvium".
  15. ^ Brody, A. G.; Pluhar, C. J.; Stock, G. M.; Greenwood, W. J. (1 May 2015). "Near-Surface Geophysical Imaging of a Talus Deposit in Yosemite Valley, California". Environmental & Engineering Geoscience. 21 (2): 111–127. doi:10.2113/gseegeosci.21.2.111.
  16. ^ Statham, I. (July 1973). "Scree Slope Development under Conditions of Surface Particle Movement". Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers (59): 41–53. doi:10.2307/621711. JSTOR 621711.
  17. ^ Statham, Ian (January 1976). "A scree slope rockfall model". Earth Surface Processes. 1 (1): 43–62. doi:10.1002/esp.3290010106.
  18. ^ Kirkby, M. J.; Statham, Ian (May 1975). "Surface Stone Movement and Scree Formation". The Journal of Geology. 83 (3): 349–362. Bibcode:1975JG.....83..349K. doi:10.1086/628097. ISSN 0022-1376. S2CID 129310011.
  19. ^ Gerber, E.; Scheidegger, A. E. (May 1974). "On the dynamics of scree slopes". Rock Mechanics. 6 (1): 25–38. Bibcode:1974RMFMR...6...25G. doi:10.1007/BF01238051. ISSN 0035-7448. S2CID 129262031.
  20. ^ Whalley, WB (1984). "Rockfalls". In Brunsden, D.; Prior, DB (eds.). Slope Instability. Chichester: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 217–256.
  21. ^ Hallet, B (2006). "Why do freezing rocks break?". Science. 314 (5802): 1092–1093. doi:10.1126/science.1135200. PMID 17110559. S2CID 140686582.
  22. ^ Walder, J; Hallet, B (1985). "A theoretical model of the fracture of rock during freezing". Geological Society of America Bulletin. 96 (3): 336–346. Bibcode:1985GSAB...96..336W. doi:10.1130/0016-7606(1985)96<336:ATMOTF>2.0.CO;2.
  23. ^ Murton, JB; Peterson, R; Ozouf, J-C (2006). "Bedrock fracture by ice segregation in cold regions". Science. 314 (5802): 1127–1129. Bibcode:2006Sci...314.1127M. doi:10.1126/science.1132127. PMID 17110573. S2CID 37639112.
  24. ^ a b c Jie, Chen; Blume, Hans-Peter (October 2002). "Rock-weathering by lichens in Antarctic: patterns and mechanisms". Journal of Geographical Sciences. 12 (4): 387–396. doi:10.1007/BF02844595. ISSN 1009-637X. S2CID 128666735.
  25. ^ Benn, D. I.; Evans, D. J. A (2010). Glaciers and Glaciation, 2nd ed. London: Hodder-Arnold. ISBN 9780340905791.
  26. ^ a b Nakawo, M.; Young, G.J. (1981). "Field Experiments to Determine the Effect of a Debris Layer on Ablation of Glacier Ice". Annals of Glaciology. 2: 85–91. Bibcode:1981AnGla...2...85N. doi:10.3189/172756481794352432. ISSN 0260-3055.
  27. ^ a b c östrem, Gunnar (January 1959). "Ice Melting under a Thin Layer of Moraine, and the Existence of Ice Cores in Moraine Ridges". Geografiska Annaler. 41 (4): 228–230. doi:10.1080/20014422.1959.11907953. ISSN 2001-4422.
  28. ^ Wheeler, Ralph A. (June 1990). "Spiders Are Spiders…". Southern Medical Journal. 83 (6): 723. doi:10.1097/00007611-199006000-00037. ISSN 0038-4348. PMID 2356505.
  29. ^ a b Zacharda, Miloslav; Gude, Martin; Růžička, Vlastimil (July 2007). "Thermal regime of three low elevation scree slopes in central Europe". Permafrost and Periglacial Processes. 18 (3): 301–308. doi:10.1002/ppp.598. S2CID 129472548.
  30. ^ Quaternary glaciations : extent and chronology. Ehlers, Jürgen, 1948-, Gibbard, Philip L. (Philip Leonard), 1949- (1st ed.). Amsterdam: Elsevier. 2004. ISBN 0-08-047407-1. OCLC 318641379.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  31. ^ Tallis, J. H. (1991). Plant community history : long-term changes in plant distribution and diversity (1st ed.). London: Chapman and Hall. ISBN 0-412-30320-5. OCLC 23255468.
  32. ^ Hájková, Petra; Horsák, Michal; Hájek, Michal (2012-01-01), "2 Late-Glacial and Holocene history of the Western Carpathian calcareous fens", Calcareous Mires of Slovakia, KNNV Publishing, pp. 13–20, doi:10.1163/9789004277960_003, ISBN 978-90-04-27796-0, retrieved 2020-12-17
  33. ^ Simpson, Peter. "Scree running". Encyclopaedia of New Zealand.
  34. ^ Short, David (2012-02-01). "Scree running madness". Wilderness. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
  35. ^ Nettleton, John. "Scree Running". Wildlife Trust. Retrieved 2020-12-21.

scree, collection, broken, rock, fragments, base, cliff, other, steep, rocky, mass, that, accumulated, through, periodic, rockfall, landforms, associated, with, these, materials, often, called, talus, deposits, talus, deposits, typically, have, concave, upward. Scree is a collection of broken rock fragments at the base of a cliff or other steep rocky mass that has accumulated through periodic rockfall Landforms associated with these materials are often called talus deposits Talus deposits typically have a concave upwards form where the maximum inclination corresponds to the angle of repose of the mean debris particle size The exact definition of scree in the primary literature is somewhat relaxed and it often overlaps with both talus and colluvium 1 Talus at the bottom of Mount Yamnuska Alberta Canada The term scree comes from the Old Norse term for landslide skrida 2 while the term talus is a French word meaning a slope or embankment 3 4 In high altitude arctic and subarctic regions scree slopes and talus deposits are typically adjacent to hills and river valleys These steep slopes usually originate from late Pleistocene periglacial processes 5 Notable scree sites in Eastern North America include the Ice Caves at White Rocks National Recreation Area in southern Vermont and Ice Mountain in eastern West Virginia 6 in the Appalachian Mountains Screes are most abundant in the Pyrenees Alps Variscan Apennine Orocantabrian and Carpathian Mountains Iberian peninsula and Northern Europe 7 Contents 1 Description 2 Formation 2 1 Physical weathering processes 2 2 Chemical weathering processes 2 3 Biotic weathering processes 3 Interactions with surrounding landscape 3 1 Microclimates 3 2 Biodiversity 4 Scree running 5 See also 6 ReferencesDescription editThe term scree is applied both to an unstable steep mountain slope composed of rock fragments and other debris and to the mixture of rock fragments and debris itself 8 9 10 It is loosely synonymous with talus material that accumulates at the base of a projecting mass of rock 9 11 or talus slope a landform composed of talus 12 The term scree is sometimes used more broadly for any sheet of loose rock fragments mantling a slope while talus is used more narrowly for material that accumulates at the base of a cliff or other rocky slope from which it has obviously eroded 9 Scree is formed by rockfall 10 13 which distinguishes it from colluvium Colluvium is rock fragments or soil that is deposited by rainwash sheetwash or slow downhill creep usually at the base of gentle slopes or hillsides 14 However the terms scree talus 9 10 and sometimes colluvium 1 tend to be used interchangeably The term talus deposit is sometimes used to distinguish the landform from the material of which it is made 15 Scree slopes are often assumed to be close to the angle of repose This is the slope at which a pile of granular material becomes mechanically unstable However careful examination of scree slopes shows that only those that are either rapidly accumulating new material or are experiencing rapid removal of material from their bases are close to the angle of repose Most scree slopes are less steep and they often show a concave shape so that the foot of the slope is less steep than the top of the slope 16 17 Formation edit nbsp Talus cones on north shore of Isfjord Svalbard Norway The formation of scree and talus deposits is the result of physical and chemical weathering acting on a rock face and erosive processes transporting the material downslope There are five main stages of scree slope evolution 1 accumulation 2 consolidation 3 weathering 4 encroaching vegetation and finally 5 slope degradation Scree slopes form as a result of accumulated loose coarse grained material Within the scree slope itself however there is generally good sorting of sediment by size larger particles accumulate more rapidly at the bottom of the slope 18 Cementation occurs as fine grained material fills in gaps between debris The speed of consolidation depends on the composition of the slope clayey components will bind debris together faster than sandy ones Should weathering outpace the supply of sediment plants may take root Plant roots diminish cohesive forces between the coarse and fine components degrading the slope 19 The predominant processes that degrade a rock slope depend largely on the regional climate see below but also on the thermal and topographic stresses governing the parent rock material Example process domains include Physical weathering Chemical weathering Biotic processes Thermal stresses Topographic stresses Physical weathering processes edit nbsp Scree in the lower part of the Mai Valley on the Aurouze mountain Hautes Alpes France Scree formation is commonly attributed to the formation of ice within mountain rock slopes The presence of joints fractures and other heterogeneities in the rock wall can allow precipitation groundwater and surface runoff to flow through the rock If the temperature drops below the freezing point of the fluid contained within the rock during particularly cold evenings for example this water can freeze Since water expands by 9 when it freezes it can generate large forces that either create new cracks or wedge blocks into an unstable position Special boundary conditions rapid freezing and water confinement may be required for this to happen 20 Freeze thaw scree production is thought to be most common during the spring and fall when the daily temperatures fluctuate around the freezing point of water and snow melt produces ample free water The efficiency of freeze thaw processes in scree production is a subject of ongoing debate Many researchers believe that ice formation in large open fracture systems cannot generate high enough pressures to force the fracturing apart of parent rocks and instead suggest that the water and ice simply flow out of the fractures as pressure builds 21 Many argue that frost heaving like that known to act in soil in permafrost areas may play an important role in cliff degradation in cold places 22 23 Eventually a rock slope may be completely covered by its own scree so that production of new material ceases The slope is then said to be mantled with debris However since these deposits are still unconsolidated there is still a possibility of the deposit slopes themselves failing If the talus deposit pile shifts and the particles exceed the angle of repose the scree itself may slide and fail Chemical weathering processes edit Phenomena such as acid rain may also contribute to the chemical degradation of rocks and produce more loose sediments Biotic weathering processes edit Biotic processes often intersect with both physical and chemical weathering regimes as the organisms that interact with rocks can mechanically or chemically alter them Lichen frequently grow on the surface of or within rocks Particularly during the initial colonization process the lichen often inserts its hyphae into small fractures or mineral cleavage planes that exist in the host rock 24 As the lichen grows the hyphae expand and force the fractures to widen This increases the potential of fragmentation possibly leading to rockfalls During the growth of the lichen thallus small fragments of the host rock can be incorporated into the biological structure and weaken the rock Freeze thaw action of the entire lichen body due to microclimatic changes in moisture content can alternately cause thermal contraction and expansion 24 which also stresses the host rock Lichen also produce a number of organic acids as metabolic byproducts 24 These often react with the host rock dissolving minerals and breaking down the substrate into unconsolidated sediments Interactions with surrounding landscape editScree often collects at the base of glaciers concealing them from their environment For example Lech dl Dragon in the Sella group of the Dolomites is derived from the melting waters of a glacier and is hidden under a thick layer of scree Debris cover on a glacier affects the energy balance and therefore the melting process 25 26 Whether the glacier ice begins melting more rapidly or more slowly is determined by the thickness of the layer of scree on its surface The amount of energy reaching the surface of the ice below the debris can be estimated via the one dimensional homogeneous material assumption of Fourier s Law 26 Q k T s T i d displaystyle Q k left frac T s T i d right nbsp where k is the thermal conductivity of the debris material Ts is the ambient temperature above the debris surface Ti is the temperature at the lower surface of the debris and d is the thickness of the debris layer nbsp Scree covered glacier Lech dl Dragon Italy Debris with a low thermal conductivity value or a high thermal resistivity will not efficiently transfer energy through to the glacier meaning the amount of heat energy reaching the ice surface is substantially lessened This can act to insulate the glacier from incoming radiation The albedo or the ability of a material to reflect incoming radiation energy is also an important quality to consider Generally the debris will have a lower albedo than the glacier ice it covers and will thus reflect less incoming solar radiation Instead the debris will absorb radiation energy and transfer it through the cover layer to the debris ice interface If the ice is covered by a relatively thin layer of debris less than around 2 centimeters thick the albedo effect is most important 27 As scree accumulates atop the glacier the ice s albedo will begin to decrease Instead the glacier ice will absorb incoming solar radiation and transfer it to the upper surface of the ice Then the glacier ice begins to absorb the energy and uses it in the process of melting However once the debris cover reaches 2 or more centimeters in thickness the albedo effect begins to dissipate 27 Instead the debris blanket will act to insulate the glacier preventing incoming radiation from penetrating the scree and reaching the ice surface 27 In addition to rocky debris thick snow cover can form an insulating blanket between the cold winter atmosphere and subnivean spaces in screes 28 As a result soil bedrock and also subterranean voids in screes do not freeze at high elevations Microclimates edit A scree has many small interstitial voids while an ice cave has a few large hollows Due to cold air seepage and air circulation the bottom of scree slopes have a thermal regime similar to ice caves Because subsurface ice is separated from the surface by thin permeable sheets of sediment screes experience cold air seepage from the bottom of the slope where sediment is thinnest 6 This freezing circulating air maintains internal scree temperatures 6 8 9 0 C colder than external scree temperatures 29 These lt 0 C thermal anomalies occur up to 1000m below sites with mean annual air temperatures of 0 C Patchy permafrost which forms under conditions lt 0 C probably exists at the bottom of some scree slopes despite mean annual air temperatures of 6 8 7 5 C 29 Biodiversity edit During the last glacial period a narrow ice free corridor formed in the Scandinavian ice sheet 30 introducing taiga species to the terrain These boreal plants and animals still live in modern alpine and subarctic tundra as well as high altitude coniferous forests and mires 31 32 Scree microclimates maintained by circulating freezing air create microhabitats that support taiga plants and animals that could not otherwise survive regional conditions 6 A Czech Republic Academy of Sciences research team led by physical chemist Vlastimil Ruzicka analyzing 66 scree slopes published a paper in Journal of Natural History in 2012 reporting that This microhabitat as well as interstitial spaces between scree blocks elsewhere on this slope supports an important assemblage of boreal and arctic bryophytes pteridophytes and arthropods that are disjunct from their normal ranges far to the north This freezing scree slope represents a classic example of a palaeo refugium that significantly contributes to the protection and maintenance of regional landscape biodiversity 6 Ice Mountain a massive scree in West Virginia supports distinctly different distributions of plant and animal species than northern latitudes 6 Scree running editScree running is the activity of running down a scree slope which can be very quick as the scree moves with the runner Some scree slopes are no longer possible to run because the stones have been moved towards the bottom 33 34 35 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scree nbsp Look up scree or talus in Wiktionary the free dictionary Blockfield similar to talus and scree slopes formed by frost weather instead of mass wastings Fellfield Lava stringer Type of rock formationPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targets Mass wasting Movement of rock or soil down slopes Stratified slope deposit Weathering Deterioration of rocks and minerals through exposure to the elements Scree plotReferences edit a b Landslides investigation and mitigation Turner A Keith 1941 Schuster Robert L Washington D C National Academy Press 1996 ISBN 0 309 06208 X OCLC 33102185 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Harper Douglas scree Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2006 04 20 Harper Douglas talus Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 2008 12 01 Talus bab la language portal Retrieved 2011 12 10 Ruzicka Vlastimil Hajer Jaromir 1996 12 01 Spiders Araneae of stony debris in North Bohemia Arachnologische Mitteilungen 12 46 56 doi 10 5431 aramit1202 ISSN 1018 4171 a b c d e Ruzicka Vlastimil Zacharda Miloslav Nemcova Lenka Smilauer Petr Nekola Jeffrey C September 2012 Periglacial microclimate in low altitude scree slopes supports relict biodiversity Journal of Natural History 46 35 36 2145 2157 doi 10 1080 00222933 2012 707248 ISSN 0022 2933 S2CID 86730753 Valachovic Milan Dierssen Klaus Dimopoulos Panayotis Hadac Emil Loidi Javier Mucina Ladislav Rossi Graziano Tendero Francisco Valle Tomaselli Marcello June 1997 The vegetation on screes A synopsis of higher syntaxa in Europe Folia Geobotanica et Phytotaxonomica 32 2 173 192 doi 10 1007 BF02803739 ISSN 0015 5551 S2CID 223142 scree Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required a b c d Jackson Julia A ed 1997 scree Glossary of geology Fourth ed Alexandria Virginia American Geological Institute ISBN 0922152349 a b c Allaby Michael 2013 scree A dictionary of geology and earth sciences Fourth ed Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199653065 Jackson 1997 talus Thornbury William D 1969 Principles of geomorphology 2d ed New York Wiley p 66 ISBN 0471861979 Blatt Harvey Middleton Gerard Murray Raymond 1980 Origin of sedimentary rocks 2d ed Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall p 176 ISBN 0136427103 Jackson 1997 colluvium Brody A G Pluhar C J Stock G M Greenwood W J 1 May 2015 Near Surface Geophysical Imaging of a Talus Deposit in Yosemite Valley California Environmental amp Engineering Geoscience 21 2 111 127 doi 10 2113 gseegeosci 21 2 111 Statham I July 1973 Scree Slope Development under Conditions of Surface Particle Movement Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 59 41 53 doi 10 2307 621711 JSTOR 621711 Statham Ian January 1976 A scree slope rockfall model Earth Surface Processes 1 1 43 62 doi 10 1002 esp 3290010106 Kirkby M J Statham Ian May 1975 Surface Stone Movement and Scree Formation The Journal of Geology 83 3 349 362 Bibcode 1975JG 83 349K doi 10 1086 628097 ISSN 0022 1376 S2CID 129310011 Gerber E Scheidegger A E May 1974 On the dynamics of scree slopes Rock Mechanics 6 1 25 38 Bibcode 1974RMFMR 6 25G doi 10 1007 BF01238051 ISSN 0035 7448 S2CID 129262031 Whalley WB 1984 Rockfalls In Brunsden D Prior DB eds Slope Instability Chichester John Wiley and Sons pp 217 256 Hallet B 2006 Why do freezing rocks break Science 314 5802 1092 1093 doi 10 1126 science 1135200 PMID 17110559 S2CID 140686582 Walder J Hallet B 1985 A theoretical model of the fracture of rock during freezing Geological Society of America Bulletin 96 3 336 346 Bibcode 1985GSAB 96 336W doi 10 1130 0016 7606 1985 96 lt 336 ATMOTF gt 2 0 CO 2 Murton JB Peterson R Ozouf J C 2006 Bedrock fracture by ice segregation in cold regions Science 314 5802 1127 1129 Bibcode 2006Sci 314 1127M doi 10 1126 science 1132127 PMID 17110573 S2CID 37639112 a b c Jie Chen Blume Hans Peter October 2002 Rock weathering by lichens in Antarctic patterns and mechanisms Journal of Geographical Sciences 12 4 387 396 doi 10 1007 BF02844595 ISSN 1009 637X S2CID 128666735 Benn D I Evans D J A 2010 Glaciers and Glaciation 2nd ed London Hodder Arnold ISBN 9780340905791 a b Nakawo M Young G J 1981 Field Experiments to Determine the Effect of a Debris Layer on Ablation of Glacier Ice Annals of Glaciology 2 85 91 Bibcode 1981AnGla 2 85N doi 10 3189 172756481794352432 ISSN 0260 3055 a b c ostrem Gunnar January 1959 Ice Melting under a Thin Layer of Moraine and the Existence of Ice Cores in Moraine Ridges Geografiska Annaler 41 4 228 230 doi 10 1080 20014422 1959 11907953 ISSN 2001 4422 Wheeler Ralph A June 1990 Spiders Are Spiders Southern Medical Journal 83 6 723 doi 10 1097 00007611 199006000 00037 ISSN 0038 4348 PMID 2356505 a b Zacharda Miloslav Gude Martin Ruzicka Vlastimil July 2007 Thermal regime of three low elevation scree slopes in central Europe Permafrost and Periglacial Processes 18 3 301 308 doi 10 1002 ppp 598 S2CID 129472548 Quaternary glaciations extent and chronology Ehlers Jurgen 1948 Gibbard Philip L Philip Leonard 1949 1st ed Amsterdam Elsevier 2004 ISBN 0 08 047407 1 OCLC 318641379 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Tallis J H 1991 Plant community history long term changes in plant distribution and diversity 1st ed London Chapman and Hall ISBN 0 412 30320 5 OCLC 23255468 Hajkova Petra Horsak Michal Hajek Michal 2012 01 01 2 Late Glacial and Holocene history of the Western Carpathian calcareous fens Calcareous Mires of Slovakia KNNV Publishing pp 13 20 doi 10 1163 9789004277960 003 ISBN 978 90 04 27796 0 retrieved 2020 12 17 Simpson Peter Scree running Encyclopaedia of New Zealand Short David 2012 02 01 Scree running madness Wilderness Retrieved 2020 12 21 Nettleton John Scree Running Wildlife Trust Retrieved 2020 12 21 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scree amp oldid 1191981371, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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