“…Recent developments in geochemical methods, for example, meteoric and in situ cosmogenic nuclides (Carretier et al, 2015;Reusser & Bierman, 2010;Tofelde et al, 2018), have made advances in quantifying the relative contributions of different transport domains, but the methodology involved (e.g., measurements on multiple grain sizes) is costly, labor-intensive, and cannot easily be applied to a wide area. Another method to quantify the contributions of each transport domain to the total erosional budget of a system is to map the transition between transport domains either through field observations (e.g., Montgomery & Dietrich, 1989) or through the analysis of digital topography (e.g., Band, 1986;Clubb et al, 2014;Dietrich et al, 1993;Grieve et al, 2016;Tarolli & Dalla Fontana, 2009).…”