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Dive into the research topics where Bernhard Salcher is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernhard Salcher.


Geology | 2012

Debris-flow–dependent variation of cosmogenically derived catchment-wide denudation rates

Florian Kober; Kristina Hippe; Bernhard Salcher; Susan Ivy-Ochs; Peter W. Kubik; Lukas Wacker; N. Hählen

Catchment-wide denudation rates (CWDRs) obtained from cosmogenic nuclides are an efficient way to determine geomorphic processes quantitatively in alpine mountain ranges over Holocene time scales. These rate estimations assume steady geomorphic processes. Here we use a time series (3 yr) in the Aare catchment (central Swiss Alps) to test the impact of spatially heterogeneous stochastic sediment supply on CWDRs. Our results show that low-frequency, high-magnitude debris-flow events significantly perturb cosmogenic nuclide ( 10 Be, 14 C) concentrations and thus CWDRs. The 10 Be concentrations decrease by a factor of two following debris-flow events, resulting in a doubling of inferred CWDRs. The variability indicates a clear time and source dependency on sediment supply, with restricted area-weighted mixing of sediment. Accordingly, in transient environments, it is critical to have an understanding of the history of geomorphic processes to derive meaningful CWDRs. We hypothesize that the size of debris flows, their connectivity with the trunk stream, and the ability of the system to sufficiently mix sediment from low- and high-order catchments control the magnitude of CWDR perturbations. We also determined in situ 14 C in a few samples. In conjunction with 10 Be, these data suggest partial storage for colluvium of a few thousand years within the catchment prior to debris-flow initiation.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2017

Constant denudation rates in a high alpine catchment for the last 6 kyrs

Reto Grischott; Florian Kober; Maarten Lupker; Kristina Hippe; Susan Ivy-Ochs; Irka Hajdas; Bernhard Salcher; Marcus Christl

Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides (TCN) have widely been used as proxies in determining denudation rates in catchments. Most studies were limited to samples from modern active streams, thus little is known about the magnitude and causes of TCN variability on millennial time scales. In this work we present a 6 kyrs long, high resolution record of 10Be concentrations (n = 18), which were measured in sediment cores from an alluvial fan delta at the outlet of the Fedoz Valley in the Swiss Alps. This record is paired with a three-year time series (n = 4) of 10Be measured in sediment from the active stream currently feeding this fan delta. The temporal trend in the 10Be concentrations after correction for postdepositional production of 10Be was found to be overall constant and in good agreement with the modern river 10Be concentration. The calculated mean catchment-wide denudation rate amounts to 0.73 ± 0.18 mm/yr. This fairly constant level of 10Be concentrations can be caused by a constant denudation rate over time within the catchment or alternatively by a buffered signal. In this contribution we suggest that the large alluvial floodplain in the Fedoz Valley may act as an efficient buffer on Holocene time scales in which sediments with different 10Be signatures are mixed. Therefore, presumable variations in the 10Be signals derived from changes in denudation under a fluctuating Holocene climate are only poorly transferred to the catchment outlet and not recorded in the 10Be record. However, despite the absence of high frequency signals, we propose that the buffered and averaged 10Be signal could be meaningfully and faithfully interpreted in terms of long-term catchment-averaged denudation rate. Our study suggests that alluvial buffers play an important role in regulating the 10Be signal exported by some alpine settings that needs to be taken into account and further investigated. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Geografiska Annaler Series A-physical Geography | 2018

Geophysical, topographic and stratigraphic analyses of perialpine kettles and implications for postglacial mire formation

Joachim Götz; Bernhard Salcher; Reinhard Starnberger; Robert Krisai

ABSTRACT Kettle holes are common ice decay features in formerly glaciated areas. They are highly variable in size and geometry and may form in a variety of glacial and glaciofluvial landforms. Kettle holes are either dry or exist as wetlands or lakes, only rarely transforming into kettle-hole mires. This study investigates Late Pleistocene kettles in the area of the LGM Salzach Glacier Lobe in the North Alpine Foreland. Kettles are here specifically well preserved and concentrate along the former glacier lobe terminus, where they could develop within large elevated areas protected from pro and postglacial sediment redistribution also showing minor anthropogenic overprint. Highest kettle concentrations were observed within a narrow swath along the distal lobe dominated by terminal moraines, ice wastage and outwash deposits, whereas they are almost absent in the centre of the former glacier lobe. Based on a new dataset on regional kettle distribution and a study of comparable wetland environments, we show that kettle lake formation is a specific but rare phenomenon, which is closely related to the preceding dynamics at the glacier lobe and the glacial depositional environment. By applying geophysical surveys (electrical resistivity tomography, ground-penetrating radar), topographic as well as stratigraphic investigations (DEM analysis, core-drilling and radiocarbon dating), we explore the postglacial evolution of the Jackenmoos kettle and propose a modified model of peat formation in kettle-hole mires, mainly as a function of the centripetal growth of a floating mat covering a central subsurface water body.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2018

Postglacial to Holocene landscape evolution and process rates in steep alpine catchments: Postglacial to Holocene alpine landscape evolution and process rates

Florian Kober; Kristina Hippe; Bernhard Salcher; Reto Grischott; Raphael Zurfluh; Irka Hajdas; Lukas Wacker; Marcus Christl; Susan Ivy-Ochs

Climate change and high magnitude mass wasting events pose adverse societal effects and hazards, especially in alpine regions. Quantification of such geomorphic processes and their rates is therefore critical but is often hampered by the lack of appropriate techniques and the various spatiotemporal scales involved in these studies. Here we exploit both in situ cosmogenic beryllium-10 (Be) and carbon-14 (C) nuclide concentrations for deducing exposure ages and tracing of sediment through small alpine debris flow catchments in central Switzerland. The sediment cascade and modern processes we track from the source areas, through debris flow torrents to their final export out into sink regions with cosmogenic nuclides over an unprecedented five-year time series with seasonal resolution. Data from a seismic survey and a 90m core revealed a glacially overdeepened basin, filled with glacial and paraglacial sediments. Surface exposure dating of fan boulders and radiocarbon ages constrain the valley fill from the last deglaciation until the Holocene and show that most of the fan existed in early Holocene times already. Current fan processes are controlled by episodic debris flow activity, snow (firn) and rock avalanches. Field investigations, digital elevation models (DEMs) of difference and geomorphic analysis agree with sediment fingerprinting with cosmogenic nuclides, highlighting that the bulk of material exported today at the outlet of the subcatchments derives from the lower fans. Cosmogenic nuclide concentrations steadily decrease from headwater sources to distal fan channels due to the incorporation of material with lower nuclide concentrations. Further downstream the admixture of sediment from catchments with less frequent debris flow activity can dilute the cosmogenic nuclide signals from debris flow dominated catchments but may also reach thresholds where buffering is limited. Consequently, careful assessment of boundary conditions and driving forces is required when apparent denudation rates derived from cosmogenic nuclide analysis are upscaled to larger regions.


Swiss Journal of Geosciences | 2014

The Chironico landslide (Valle Leventina, southern Swiss Alps): age and evolution

Anne Claude; Susan Ivy-Ochs; Florian Kober; Marco Antognini; Bernhard Salcher; Peter W. Kubik


Geomorphology | 2010

High-resolution mapping of glacial landforms in the North Alpine Foreland, Austria.

Bernhard Salcher; Ralph Hinsch; Michael Wagreich


Geomorphology | 2010

Climate as main factor controlling the sequence development of two Pleistocene alluvial fans in the Vienna Basin (eastern Austria) — A numerical modelling approach

Bernhard Salcher; Robert Faber; Michael Wagreich


Quaternary International | 2010

Climate and tectonic controls on Pleistocene sequence development and river evolution in the Southern Vienna Basin (Austria)

Bernhard Salcher; Michael Wagreich


Global and Planetary Change | 2014

Glacial impact on short-wavelength topography and long-lasting effects on the denudation of a deglaciated mountain range

Bernhard Salcher; Florian Kober; E. Kissling; Sean D. Willett


Tectonics | 2012

Strike‐slip tectonics and Quaternary basin formation along the Vienna Basin fault system inferred from Bouguer gravity derivatives

Bernhard Salcher; Bruno Meurers; Jeroen Smit; Kurt Decker; Monika Hölzel; Michael Wagreich

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Jörg Robl

University of Salzburg

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