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Optimality approaches to describe characteristic fluvial patterns on landscapes

Authors
Paik, KyungrockKumar, Praveen
Issue Date
12-May-2010
Publisher
ROYAL SOC
Keywords
landscape evolution; hydrology; fluvial geomorphology
Citation
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, v.365, no.1545, pp.1387 - 1395
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume
365
Number
1545
Start Page
1387
End Page
1395
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/116450
DOI
10.1098/rstb.2009.0303
ISSN
0962-8436
Abstract
Mother Nature has left amazingly regular geomorphic patterns on the Earth's surface. These patterns are often explained as having arisen as a result of some optimal behaviour of natural processes. However, there is little agreement on what is being optimized. As a result, a number of alternatives have been proposed, often with little a priori justification with the argument that successful predictions will lend a posteriori support to the hypothesized optimality principle. Given that maximum entropy production is an optimality principle attempting to predict the microscopic behaviour from a macroscopic characterization, this paper provides a review of similar approaches with the goal of providing a comparison and contrast between them to enable synthesis. While assumptions of optimal behaviour approach a system from a macroscopic viewpoint, process-based formulations attempt to resolve the mechanistic details whose interactions lead to the system level functions. Using observed optimality trends may help simplify problem formulation at appropriate levels of scale of interest. However, for such an approach to be successful, we suggest that optimality approaches should be formulated at a broader level of environmental systems' viewpoint, i.e. incorporating the dynamic nature of environmental variables and complex feedback mechanisms between fluvial and non-fluvial processes.
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