ALLUVIAL FAN RECORDS OF FIRE AND GEOMORPHIC RESPONSE IN RANGELAND ECOSYSTEMS
Because fires in sagebrush tend to be stand-replacing, do these fires exert a similar control on erosion rates? We are developing a late Holocene record of geomorphic response to fires in the sagebrush rangelands of the Danskin Mountains, Idaho, through 14C dating of charcoal samples in fire-related deposits and stratigraphic analysis of fire-related deposits in alluvial fans. OSL dating of interfingered main-channel overbank flood deposits with alluvial fan sediments also provides chronological control and basal ages for alluvial fan deposits. Fieldwork is focused on steep (typically >30 º) rangeland areas where alluvial fans are found at the mouths of low order channels (95% of mapped fan basins are <1 km2). Fans accumulate sediment from the small contributing basins, including fire-related (charcoal rich) debris and hyperconcentrated-flow deposits. Modern vegetation distributions for the study area mapped from aerial photographs are 76% grass and shrub, 17% aspen (Populous tremuloides), 1% Douglas fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) and 4% riparian species. Preliminary OSL ages from one fan provide an age of 7,356 ± 1,332 yr for overbank fine sands at the base of exposed interfingered fan and floodplain deposits. This deposit is overlain by 3 distinct fire related debris flows and charcoal-rich overbank flood deposits. Future 14C dates will provide further information about fire-related sedimentation events.