GSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, Washington, USA - 2017

Paper No. 72-18
Presentation Time: 9:00 AM-5:30 PM

BURN SEVERITY AND ITS IMPACT ON SOIL PROPERTIES: 2016 ERSKINE FIRE IN THE SOUTHERN SIERRA NEVADA


HAAKE, Sade1, GUO, Junhua1 and KRUGH, William C.2, (1)Department of Geological Sciences, California State University, Bakersfield, 9001 Stockdale Highway, Bakersfield, CA 93311, (2)Department of Geological Sciences, California State University- Bakersfield, 9001 Stockdale Hwy., Bakersfield, CA 93311, shaake@csub.edu

Wildfire frequency in the southern Sierra Nevada has increased over the past decades. The effects of wildfires on soils can increase the frequency of slope failure and debris flow events, which pose a greater risk to people, as human populations expand into foothill and mountainous communities of the Sierra Nevada. Alterations in the physical properties of burned soils are one such effect that can catalyze slope failure and` debris flow events. Moreover, the degree of a soil’s physical alteration resulting from wildfire is linked to fire intensity. The 2016 Erskine fire occurred in the southern Sierra Nevada, burning 48,019 acres, resulting in soils of unburned, low, moderate, and high burn severities. In this study, the physical properties of soils with varying degrees of burn severity are explored within the 2016 Erskine fire perimeter. The results constrain the effects of burn severity on soil’s physical properties. Unburned, low, moderate, and high burn severity soil samples were collected within the Erskine fire perimeter. Alterations in soils’ physical properties resulting from burn severity are explored using X-ray diffractometry analysis, liquid limit, plastic limit, and shear strength tests. Preliminary results from this study will be used to assess debris flow and slope failure hazard models within burned areas of the Kern River watershed in the southern Sierra Nevada.