Going with the Flow:
David Mohrig studies the changing face of our planet
By Marc Airhart
Dec. 1, 2006
AUSTIN, Texas—David Mohrig keeps a flat, palm-sized rock on his
desk that he’s had since he was six years old. He found it on a
fossil-hunting trip with his father. Look closely at the piece of
shallow marine limestone and you’ll see broken bits of ancient
denizens of the sea: bryozoans, brachiopods, crinoids, gastropods and
trilobites.
“I was kind of hooked just hunting for fossils
and exploring the streams and hill slopes,” said Mohrig, who grew up
in southern Minnesota. “My interest in geology started early and it
stayed.” Even as a child, he was curious about how sand was moving
through the river in his hometown.
Mohrig joined the University of Texas at Austin’s
Department of Geological Sciences as an associate professor of geology
this past summer. Before coming to the university, he was an associate
professor of geology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
He is interested in how Earth’s surface evolves
over time and how it is affected by changes in the environment such as
sea level, precipitation and tectonics. He has studied how sediment
dunes change shape as they move along a riverbed; compared land-based
and underwater channel flows; pondered why underwater landslides
travel as far as they do; and tried to understand what channels on
Mars reveal about ancient climate on the red planet.
Mississippi Delta
One fertile stream of research for Mohrig is the Mississippi Delta.
A combination of human impacts and natural forces is
wiping 25 square miles of delta wetlands off the map each year. That
impacts coastal fisheries and reduces natural defenses against storm
surges such as those caused by Hurricane Katrina. So there is
considerable interest in delta restoration.
Before the land can be restored, Mohrig cautioned, it’s important to
understand how the delta was formed and how it worked before humans
altered it.
“We’re looking at a specific image of the surface,” he said. “But we
don’t know if it is a representative image.” The delta may have had
a number of different states over the last several million years.
“If the delta today is not a standard looking surface, it would be
helpful to know that now before we start trying to restore it,” he
said.
For example, according to Mohrig, there is a debate right now about
the rate at which the delta is subsiding, or sinking. How that rate
might have changed over time remains unclear. “That’s a basic
question and it affects everything we do,” he said.
Collaborations with industry may provide answers. The energy
industry collects seismic data in the Gulf of Mexico to explore for
new resources. This data can be used to create three-dimensional
maps of now buried delta surfaces. Mohrig can use these to determine
how the delta has evolved over time. He already uses some data from
WesternGeco and hopes to get access to more.
“We could collect this data ourselves,” he said. “But it is
expensive to collect and it makes sense to work with industry and
not recollect data that already exists.”
The work is part of a larger initiative at the National Center for
Earth-surface Dynamics (NCED), a National Science Foundation Science
and Technology Center where Mohrig is a principal investigator. NCED
participants, who include ecologists, engineers, geologists and
mathematicians, study how human land use shapes Earth’s surface and
how the changing surface in turn affects all life on the planet.
Channel Surfing
Mohrig often does laboratory experiments using flumes to compare how
materials flow on dry land versus underwater. He was surprised to
find that the way material flows through channels is different in
these two environments, even though surface features produced by
terrestrial and submarine flows often look similar.
On land, once a current of water and sediment gets deeper than the
confining channel topography—say, after a hard rain—it just spreads
out and floods nearby land. But underwater, because the flowing
material is only slightly more dense than the surrounding water, the
currents can be a number of times thicker than the channel that
confines them.
“They’ll still be guided by that channel, which goes against our
intuition,” Mohrig said. “You would think it would just spread
laterally under its own weight with little regard for the relatively
subtle bottom topography. But there is a basal, high density core
that can be confined in these channels and the upper flow is guided
by that and dragged along.”
Numerical models of the system did not predict this phenomenon.
That’s because the underlying physics is often so complex that the
models, to remain manageable, leave out some terms. “There are many
occasions where we throw out a wrong term assuming it won’t be
important,” Mohrig said. “The lab experiments tell us what terms we
really shouldn’t throw out.”
Underwater Landslides
As a post-doctoral associate in the mid-’90s at the University of
Minnesota, Minneapolis, Mohrig helped solve a mystery about
underwater landslides.
There is evidence in the geologic record that underwater landslides
often run much farther across the seafloor than similar landslides
on dry land. This was enigmatic because researchers knew two effects
dampened underwater landslides: 1) water resists motion more than
air does, and 2) the buoyancy of rocks and sediments underwater
makes them effectively lighter than they would be in air.
Mohrig and his team set up an experiment in the lab that mimicked an
underwater landslide. They spent a year designing and building what
they called “the fish tank,” a tank 10 meters long, three meters
high and one meter wide with a channel down the middle. When they
opened a gate on one end, a mixture of sediment and water rushed
along the channel. The researchers performed the experiment with the
tank in open air and then again full of water. High speed video
cameras allowed them to slow time down and carefully observe the
landslides.
In the underwater case, Mohrig observed water flowing under the
leading edge or “head” of the landslides and lifting them up. In the
real world, this basal lubrication reduces friction allowing a
landslide to skate across the seafloor much farther than it would
otherwise. “It turned out that underwater, these slides and
avalanches would hydroplane like your car tires,” said Mohrig.
The research appeared in 1998 in the Geological Society of America
Bulletin, but Mohrig’s interest in landslides was more than
academic.
“Submarine landslides are a great hazard,” said Mohrig. “They can
trigger tsunamis and damage deep ocean infrastructure such as
communications cables and pipelines we use to get hydrocarbons
onshore.” Underwater avalanches can also bury seafloor life.
In the late 1990s Mohrig took a break from academia for several
years and worked as a senior research geologist for Exxon in
Houston. As part of the company’s efforts to improve offshore
drilling technology, he developed methods for applying sediment
transport mechanics to seismic maps Exxon had made of sedimentary
deposits. “I gave them quantitative methods for determining how the
reservoirs were plumbed so they could more efficiently extract
hydrocarbons,” he said.
Out of this World
Mohrig’s work is not limited to Earth’s surface. On Mars, there are
large fan-shaped deposits with channels cutting across them. Some
scientists point to the channels as proof that Mars was once a much
warmer and wetter planet than it is today and that its surface might
have been able to support life.
Members of Mohrig’s research group realized that they could take
their understanding of how fluids and sediments move on Earth and
apply it to satellite and rover images of Mars. They determined that
the channels could have been caused by asteroids or comets hitting
Mars, temporarily heating up and releasing water frozen near the
surface. In other words, the channels shouldn’t be taken as proof
that Mars was ever wet and warm enough—long enough—for life to get a
toe hold.
Even as his research portfolio expands to Mars, Mohrig remains well
grounded.
“I still have the rock hammer I got for my seventh birthday,” he
said. “It’s been a hassle sometimes. There were several times when I
left it behind somewhere and I’d have to go back and get it. I’d
think, ‘I don’t want to go back up that mountain.’ But I still have
it.”
For more information about the Jackson School contact J.B. Bird at jbird@jsg.utexas.edu,
512-232-9623.