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Earth鈥檚 skin is an interdisciplinary laboratory

A base of a tree with roots exposed over rock
Suzanne Anderson was quoted in Physics Today for a recent article titled, "Earth鈥檚 skin is an interdisciplinary laboratory" about critical zone research. Here are a few excerpts:

In probing the life-supporting critical zone, researchers hope to protect it for future generations.听
Where does water go when it rains? How does soil form? How did forests and other ecosystems develop? And how can understanding those processes inform human behaviors in the face of changes in land use and climate? Those are among the questions that scientists are asking about the critical zone鈥攄efined loosely as the region at Earth鈥檚 surface that extends from the treetops down to bedrock.听

Although critical-zone research is tuned to local environments, scientists also look for broader implications. At the Boulder Creek Critical Zone Observatory in Colorado, part of the US network of nine CZOs, the main focus is on how erosion and weathering shape topography. 听

Floods, fires, and findings听
At some CZOs, natural disasters have听become natural experiments. According听to Chorover of the Catalina-Jemez CZO,听almost all the long-term erosion at the听observatory takes place in the 听years immediately听following a wildfire. That understanding,听he says, was derived from听a combination of before-and-after lidar听landscape images and measurements of听beryllium-10. Concentrations of the isotope,听which forms when cosmic rays听bombard rock minerals, provide a measure of erosion rate. And after the devastating听2013 Colorado Front Range flood,听Boulder Creek researchers led by听Suzanne Anderson studied landslides听and debris flow. 鈥淲e found that in the听course of a few minutes, the hill slopes听lost sediment produced by 300鈥400 years听of weathering,鈥 she says.

See the full article in , January 2018.