Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/13845
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Type: Journal article
Title: Flared slopes revisited
Author: Twidale, C.
Bourne, J.
Citation: Physical Geography, 1998; 19(2):109-132
Publisher: TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Issue Date: 1998
ISSN: 0272-3646
1930-0557
Abstract: Flared slopes are smooth concavities caused by subsurface moisture-generated weathering in the scarp-foot zone of hillslopes or boulders. They are well represented in granitic terrains but also developed in other massive materials such as limestone, sandstone, dacite, rhyolite, and basalt, as well as other plutonic rocks. Notches, cliff-foot caves, and swamp slots are congeners of flared slopes. Though a few bedrock flares are conceivably caused by nivation or by a combination of coastal processes, most are two-stage or etch forms. Appreciation of the origin of these forms has permitted their use in the identification and measurement of recent soil erosion and an explanation of natural bridges. Their mode of development is also germane to the origin of the host inselberg or bornhardt and, indeed, to general theories of landscape evolution. But certain discrepancies have been noted concerning the distribution and detailed morphology of flared slopes. Such anomalies are a result of structural factors (sensu lato), of variations in size of catchment and in degree of exposure, and of several protective factors. Notwithstanding, the original explanation of flared slopes stands, as do their wider implications. © 1998 by V. H. Winston & Son, Inc. All rights reserved.
DOI: 10.1080/02723646.1998.10642643
Published version: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02723646.1998.10642643
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 7
Geology & Geophysics publications

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