May - June 2002

The Fractal Nature of Erosion: Mathematics, Chaos, and the Real World

An abstract mathematical concept might eventually help create erosion-prediction models.

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By John M. Fuhrmann

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In 1967, legendary mathematician Benoit Mandelbrot posed a subtly deviant question: How long is the coastline of Great Britain? I would have been the first one to pull out an atlas and a piece of string, measure around the outline of the country, and give the simplest possible answer. But what if this did not satisfy Mandelbrot's inquiry? Well, I could then perhaps declare a spontaneous leisure tour of the countryside and ride around the coastline on my bicycle to measure the distance. This would generate an interesting result, for my new distance would far exceed my string-and-atlas measurement. Mandelbrot is not known for taking the easy way out; what if he still demanded a more rigorous answer? With the madness of mathematics in my heart, I could travel around the coastline with a yard (or meter) stick carefully measuring each beach and every crag in the dangerously rocky coastlines. Again, I would obtain an even longer measurement for the perimeter. Perhaps I could even measure the coastline one centimeter at a time or break out my trusty electron microscope and measure the distance around each cell and particle on the coastline! This would give an astronomical distance measurement. Is there any end to this absurdity? No–the coastline of Great Britain is a fractal.

A fractal is a system that resembles itself at different levels of magnification. Erosion is a fractal process–a small eroded section often resembles the larger eroded surface it is a part of. Despite the mathematical nature of erosion, useful applications of fractal mathematics in the field have remained evasive until recently. Scientists at the University of Rochester in New York have used fractals not only to model but to predict erosion as well. It is time for this groundbreaking research to graduate from the laboratory to the field.

The recent findings open a warehouse of mathematical tools to the erosion community. Fractal mathematics fills volumes of dusty books, and the critical discovery by Yonathan Shapir, Ph.D., and his colleagues pierces the membrane between physical erosion and years of complicated mathematical theory. The future of erosion research promises to be an exciting one as the Rochester laboratories pass the baton to geologists, engineers, and landscape architects.

Fractals, Fractals Everywhere

A fractal is essentially anything that shows self-similarity at different levels of magnification. That is, if a small section resembles the whole object, that object is a fractal. A small distance of rocky coastline is similar in shape to the entire coastline seen from the air, so the coastline is a fractal. A weathered and lonely eroded rock resembles its parent mountain range, so mountains are fractals. Anything that branches out and repeats itself is also a fractal. Notice tiny streams resemble the rivers they flow into. A tree branch resembles the whole tree, and the same concept applies within an individual leaf. Even the human circulatory system is a fractal. In fact, fractals are abundant in living systems–just look closely at a piece of broccoli the next time you sit down for a salad.

Mandelbrot introduced the concept of fractals in the mid-1970s. A few years later, he published his groundbreaking book, The Fractal Geometry of Nature. The equations governing fractals are numerous and nonlinear, but the solutions, when visualized graphically, produce breathtaking images. Still, mathematical fractals remain isolated from the physical world. They are trapped on chalkboards and textbook pages and have surprisingly few applications, despite their uncanny similarity to natural processes.

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Erosion modeling and prediction is the ideal field for fractals to be of use. Coastlines and riverbanks are fractal, mountains are fractal, and even root structures that prevent erosion are fractal. Furthermore, weather patterns are intricately related to fractals by chaos theory.

Scientists at the University of Rochester have recently disturbed fractals' theoretical slumber. The research team used fractals to predict when an extreme point would erode through a given surface. Fractal mathematics has stepped off the dusty page and into the laboratory, and now fractals are ready for practical development within the erosion community.

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