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Introduction to Thematic Set: Aeolian Processes, Landforms and Chronologies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2023

Nicholas Lancaster
Affiliation:
Desert Research Institute, Reno, Nevada
Mark Sweeney
Affiliation:
University of South Dakota
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Abstract

Type
Thematic Set: Aeolian Processes, Landforms and Chronologies
Copyright
Copyright © University of Washington. Published by Cambridge University Press, 2023

Studies of aeolian processes and landforms, especially on millennial to decadal timescales, provide a natural laboratory for understanding their response to forcing factors, including climate change and variability and human impacts, that determine the supply, availability, and mobility of sediment.

This Thematic Set of articles is derived from a Topical Session 136 “Aeolian Processes, Landforms and Chronologies” that was held at the 2021 Geological Society of America annual meeting in Portland, Oregon, USA. The articles in this Thematic Set investigate aeolian system responses at historical to late Pleistocene-Holocene timescales, using a variety of approaches and methods.

In the southern Great Plains, extensive mostly vegetation-stabilized dune systems border west to east flowing rivers. Their morphology and stratigraphy indicate multiple periods of accumulation and stabilization. The boundary conditions of sediment supply and availability that occurred during periods of dune formation and (re-) activation are however debated, as are the regional patterns of aeolian activity and stability (Halfen and Johnson, Reference Halfen and Johnson2013; Halfen et al., Reference Halfen, Lancaster and Wolfe2015). Forman et al. (Reference Forman, Wu, Wiest, Marin and Mayhack2023) show the importance of sediment supply to aeolian accumulation in the Red River valley of Arkansas during the 16th and 17th centuries, in relatively wetter conditions associated with the Little Ice Age, rather than drought conditions, as previously suggested.

Although there is an extensive dataset of OSL chronologies for dune systems in the Great Plains, it is not feasible to date every dune morphological unit. Baldauf et al. (Reference Baldauf, Baker, Miles, Burkhart, Gontz, Rinka and Levenson2023) use high-resolution digital elevation models from drone imagery to develop a relative chronology of parabolic dune generations in dune fields in the White River Badlands of South Dakota. Early to Middle Holocene parabolic dunes can be distinguished from Late Holocene parabolic dunes on the basis of slope and roughness (as measured by the terrain ruggedness index). Post-depositional processes of wind erosion, mass wasting and soil formation lead to a reduction in slope angles and lower terrain ruggedness indices. Vegetation cover and soil formation result in reduced sediment availability and preservation of older dune generations, even as new generations of dunes are formed. This approach has wide significance for developing relative dune chronologies elsewhere in the region and for targeting of luminescence dating campaigns. It mirrors similar methodologies applied to coastal dune systems in Australia (Patton et al., Reference Patton, Shulmeister, Ellerton and Seropian2022) and indicates the global value of this approach.

Historical records of landscape change can provide valuable information on geomorphic responses to changes in boundary conditions. McKeehan and Arbogast (Reference McKeehan and Arbogast2023) examined the record of changes in blowout occurrence and morphology in dune fields in the on the eastern shores of Lake Michigan, using aerial photographs from three periods: 1938, 1986–1988, and 2018. Using the spatial-temporal analysis of moving polygons (STAMP) model to analyze how each blowout changed in time and space, they showed that the majority of blowouts were reduced in size and/or fragmented over time, largely as dune vegetation increased. It appears that the blowouts are not forming today and are a product of past drier or stormier conditions.

These articles show clearly that innovative techniques of spatial analysis in combination with well-established approaches can provide new insights into how aeolian landforms and processes respond to changes in boundary conditions.

In addition to the articles included in this Thematic Set, this issue of Quaternary Research includes two important articles. Patton et al. (Reference Patton, Shulmeister, Hua, Almond, Rittenour, Hanson, Grealy, Gilroy and Ellerton2023) demonstrate the value of dune foot slopes as ecological and sedimentary archives, including a record of fires in the immediate area. Holliday et al. (Reference Holliday, Cuba, Lee, Windingstad, Fenerty and Bustos2023) provide further constraints on the age of the White Sands dunefield – the world's largest gypsum dune area, using the archaeological record of superimposed and stratified artefacts.

Acknowledgements

We thank Randy Schaetzl and Phil Kerr for hosting this Topical Session and the reviewers who provided comments and suggestions on the manuscripts.

References

REFERENCES

Baldauf, P.E., Baker, G.S., Miles, M.L., Burkhart, P.A., Gontz, A., Rinka, M., Levenson, M., 2023. Holocene evolution of parabolic dunes, White River Badlands, South Dakota, USA, revealed by high-resolution mapping. Quaternary Research, 115, 4657.Google Scholar
Forman, S.L., Wu, Z., Wiest, L., Marin, L., Mayhack, C., 2023. Late Quaternary fluvial and aeolian depositional environments for the western Red River, Southern Great Plains, USA. Quaternary Research, 115, 324.Google Scholar
Halfen, A.F., Johnson, W.C., 2013. A review of Great Plains dune field chronologies. Aeolian Research, 10, 135160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Halfen, A.F., Lancaster, N., Wolfe, S.A., 2015. Interpretations and common challenges of aeolian records from North American dune fields. Quaternary International, 410 7595.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holliday, V.T., Cuba, M., Lee, W., Windingstad, J., Fenerty, B., Bustos, D., 2023. Onset of dune construction based on archaeological evidence, White Sands, New Mexico. Quaternary Research, 115, 5866.Google Scholar
McKeehan, K.G., Arbogast, A.F., 2023. The geography and progression of blowouts in the coastal dunes along the eastern shore of Lake Michigan since 1938. Quaternary Research, 115, 2545.Google Scholar
Patton, N.R., Shulmeister, J., Ellerton, D., Seropian, G., 2022. Measuring landscape evolution from inception to maturity: Insights from a coastal dune system. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 584, 117448.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patton, N.R., Shulmeister, J., Hua, Q., Almond, P., Rittenour, T.M., Hanson, J.M., Grealy, A., Gilroy, J., Ellerton, D., 2023. Reconstructing Holocene fire records using dune footslope deposits at the Cooloola Sand Mass, Australia. Quaternary Research, 115, 6789.Google Scholar