Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand abstractsPloughing boulders on the Rock and Pillar Range, south-central New Zealand: their geomorphology and alpine plant associationsStefan W. Grab1, Katharine J. M. Dickinson2, Alan F. Mark2, and Tania Maegli2
1School of Geography, Archaeology and Environmental Studies, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesberg, South Africa. stefan.grab@geoarc.wits.ac.za2Botany Department, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand. kath.dickinson@otago.ac.nz; amark@otago.ac.nz; tania.maegli@stonebow.otago.ac.nzAbstract The first Southern Hemisphere descriptions of the geomorphology of currently active ploughing boulders, together with a wide range of relevant site factors and associated vegetation patterns, are provided for the high-alpine zone of the Rock and Pillar Range, south-central New Zealand. Heavy winter snow accumulation on an upper leeward slope, combined with a periglacial environment characterised by frequent freeze-thaw cycles and persistent strong westerly winds are conducive to the downslope movement of large blocks of chlorite schist, derived mainly from the weathering of locally numerous shaft tors. Downslope movement of variously shaped boulders up to 5.81 m3 (or 14.64 ± 1.00 metric tons) were up to 18.8 mm yr–1 (mean = 11.4 ± 4.0), over the last 3 decades. Such boulder movement has produced distinctive but variable furrows upslope, lateral levees and frontal “bow waves”. The associated vegetation succession is also variable, but generally consistent with that recently described from the adjacent Old Man Range during the first 24 years following major mechanical disturbance of a high-alpine cushionfield. Keywords geomorphology; high-alpine; New Zealand; periglacial; plant succession; ploughing boulders R07011; Received 2 July 2007; accepted 23 January 2008; Online publication date 11 March 2008 Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand PDF file of entire paper: Print-quality (4957K) | screen-quality (601K) This year's abstracts | Journal home page | All abstracts | Publishing home page |