Relation between dry granular flow regimes and morphology of deposits: formation of levees in pyroclastic deposits
Gwenaelle Felix (Laboratoire Magmas et Volcans), Nathalie Thomas, (IUSTI, Laboratoire Magmas et Volcans)

TL;DR
This study uses laboratory experiments of dry granular flows on inclined planes to understand how flow regimes influence deposit morphology, especially levee formation, and relates deposit features to flow dynamics, aiding interpretation of natural pyroclastic deposits.
Contribution
It demonstrates the connection between flow regimes, deposit morphology, and flow parameters, providing a quantitative method to infer flow dynamics from deposit features.
Findings
Levee/channel morphology forms in steady flow regimes.
Deposit features correlate with flow flux, velocity, and height.
Particle segregation during flow matches natural pyroclastic deposit observations.
Abstract
Experiments on dry granular matter flowing down an inclined plane are performed in order to study the dynamics of dense pyroclastic flows. The plane is rough, and always wider than the flow, focusing this study on the case of laterally unconfined (free boundary) flows.We found that several flow regimes exist depending on the input fluxand on the inclination of the plane. Each flow regime corresponds to a particular morphology of the associated deposit. In one of these regimes, the flow reaches a steady state, and the deposit exhibits a levee/channel morphology similar to those observed on small pyroclastic flow deposits. The levees result from the combination between lateral static zones on each border of the flow and the drainage of the central part of the flow after the supply stops. Particle segregation featuresare created during the flow, corresponding to those observed on the…
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