Joshua Caster
United States Geological Survey
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Featured researches published by Joshua Caster.
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2017
Alan Kasprak; Joshua Caster; Sara Bangen; Joel B. Sankey
The ability to quantify the processes driving geomorphic change in river valley margins is vital to geomorphologists seeking to understand the relative role of transport mechanisms (e.g. fluvial, aeolian, and hillslope processes) in landscape dynamics. High-resolution, repeat topographic data are becoming readily available to geomorphologists. By contrasting digital elevation models derived from repeat surveys, the transport processes driving topographic changes can be inferred, a method termed ‘mechanistic segregation.’ Unfortunately, mechanistic segregation largely relies on subjective and time consuming manual classification, which has implications both for its reproducibility and the practical scale of its application. Here we present a novel computational workflow for the mechanistic segregation of geomorphic transport processes in geospatial datasets. We apply the workflow to seven sites along the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon, where geomorphic transport is driven by a diverse suite of mechanisms. The workflow performs well when compared to field observations, with an overall predictive accuracy of 84% across 113 validation points. The approach most accurately predicts changes due to fluvial processes (100% accuracy) and aeolian processes (96%), with reduced accuracy in predictions of alluvial and colluvial processes (64% and 73%, respectively). Our workflow is designed to be applicable to a diversity of river systems and will likely provide a rapid and objective understanding of the processes driving geomorphic change at the reach and network scales. We anticipate that such an understanding will allow insight into the response of geomorphic transport processes to external forcings, such as shifts in climate, land use, or river regulation, with implications for process-based river management and restoration. Copyright
Progress in Physical Geography: Earth and Environment | 2018
Alan Kasprak; Joel B. Sankey; Daniel D. Buscombe; Joshua Caster; Amy E. East; Paul E. Grams
In river valleys, sediment moves between active river channels, near-channel deposits including bars and floodplains, and upland environments such as terraces and aeolian dunefields. Sediment availability is a prerequisite for the sustained transfer of material between these areas, and for the eco-geomorphic functioning of river networks in general. However, the difficulty of monitoring sediment availability and movement at the reach or corridor scale has hindered our ability to quantify and forecast the response of sediment transfer to hydrologic or land cover alterations. Here we leverage spatiotemporally extensive datasets quantifying sediment areal coverage along a 28 km reach of the Colorado River in Grand Canyon, southwestern USA. In concert with information on hydrologic alteration and vegetation encroachment resulting from the operation of Glen Canyon Dam (constructed in 1963) upstream of our study reach, we model the relative and combined influence of changes in (a) flow and (b) riparian vegetation extent on the areal extent of sediment available for transport in the river valley over the period from 1921 to 2016. In addition, we use projections of future streamflow and vegetation encroachment to forecast sediment availability over the 20 year period from 2016 to 2036. We find that hydrologic alteration has reduced the areal extent of bare sediment by 9% from the pre- to post-dam periods, whereas vegetation encroachment further reduced bare sediment extent by 45%. Over the next 20 years, the extent of bare sediment is forecast to be reduced by an additional 12%. Our results demonstrate the impact of river regulation, specifically the loss of annual low flows and associated vegetation encroachment, on reducing the sediment available for transfer within river valleys. This work provides an extendable framework for using high-resolution data on streamflow and land cover to assess and forecast the impact of watershed perturbation (e.g. river regulation, land cover shifts, climate change) on sediment connectivity at the corridor scale.
Scientific Investigations Report | 2017
Amy E. East; Joel B. Sankey; Helen C. Fairley; Joshua Caster; Alan Kasprak
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Aeolian Research | 2018
Joel B. Sankey; Joshua Caster; Alan Kasprak; Amy E. East
Aeolian Research | 2018
Joel B. Sankey; Alan Kasprak; Joshua Caster; Amy E. East; Helen C. Fairley
Scientific Investigations Report | 2016
Joshua Caster; Joel B. Sankey
Open-File Report | 2014
Joshua Caster; Timothy P. Dealy; Timothy Andrews; Helen C. Fairley; Amy E. East; Joel B. Sankey
Geomorphology | 2017
Laura M. Norman; Joel B. Sankey; David J. Dean; Joshua Caster; Stephen B. DeLong; Whitney M. DeLong; Jon D. Pelletier
Professional Paper | 2016
Amy E. East; Brian D. Collins; Joel B. Sankey; Skye C. Corbett; Helen C. Fairley; Joshua Caster
Archive | 2017
Alan Kasprak; Sara Bangen; Daniel D. Buscombe; Joshua Caster; Amy E. East; Paul E. Grams; Joel B. Sankey