TY - JOUR A1 - Luna, Lisa Victoria A1 - Bookhagen, Bodo A1 - Niedermann, Samuel A1 - Rugel, Georg A1 - Scharf, Andreas A1 - Merchel, Silke T1 - Glacial chronology and production rate cross-calibration of five cosmogenic nuclide and mineral systems from the southern Central Andean Plateau JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - Glacial deposits on the high-altitude, arid southern Central Andean Plateau (CAP), the Puna in northwestern Argentina, document past changes in climate, but the associated geomorphic features have rarely been directly dated. This study provides direct age control of glacial moraine deposits from the central Puna (24 degrees S) at elevations of 3900-5000 m through surface exposure dating with cosmogenic nuclides. Our results show that the most extensive glaciations occurred before 95 ka and an additional major advance occurred between 46 and 39 ka. The latter period is synchronous with the highest lake levels in the nearby Pozuelos basin and the Minchin (Inca Huasi) wet phase on the Altiplano in the northern CAP. None of the dated moraines produced boulder ages corresponding to the Tauca wet phase (24-15 ka). Additionally, the volcanic lithologies of the deposits allow us to establish production ratios at low latitude and high elevation for five different nuclide and mineral systems: Be-10, Ne-21, and Al-26 from quartz (11 or 12 samples) and He-3 and Ne-21 from pyroxene (10 samples). We present production ratios for all combinations of the measured nuclides and cross-calibrated production rates for 21Ne in pyroxene and quartz for the high, (sub-)tropical Andes. The production rates are based on our Be-10-normalized production ratios and a weighted mean of reference 10Be production rates calibrated in the high, tropical Andes (4.02 +/- 0.12 at g(-1) yr(-1)). These are, Ne-21(qtz): 18.1 +/- 1.2 at g(-1) yr(-1) and Ne-21(px): 36.6 +/- 1.8 at g(-1) yr(-1) (En(88-94)) scaled to sea level and high latitude using the Lal/Stone scheme, with 1 sigma uncertainties. As He-3 and Al-26 have been directly calibrated in the tropical Andes, we recommend using those rates. Finally, we compare exposure ages calculated using all measured cosmogenic nuclides from each sample, including 11 feldspar samples measured for Cl-36, and a suite of previously published production rates. (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - production rate KW - cross-calibration KW - South American Monsoon KW - Quaternary climate change KW - moraine Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2018.07.034 SN - 0012-821X SN - 1385-013X VL - 500 SP - 242 EP - 253 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Roda-Boluda, Duna C. A1 - Whittaker, Alexander C. A1 - Gheorghiu, Delia M. A1 - Rodes, Angel A1 - D'Arcy, Mitch T1 - Be-10 erosion rates controlled by transient response to normal faulting through incision and landsliding JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - Quantifying erosion rates, and how they compare to rock uplift rates, is fundamental for understanding landscape response to tectonics and associated sediment fluxes from upland areas. The erosional response to uplift is well-represented by river incision and the associated landslide activity. However, characterising the relationship between these processes remains a major challenge in tectonically active areas, in some cases because landslides can preclude obtaining reliable erosion rates from cosmogenic radionuclide (CRN) concentrations. Here, we quantify the control of tectonics and its coupled geomorphic response on the erosion rates of catchments in southern Italy that are experiencing a transient response to normal faulting. We analyse in-situ Be-10 concentrations for detrital sediment samples, collected along the strike of faults with excellent tectonic constraints and landslide inventories. We demonstrate that Be-10-derived erosion rates are controlled by fault throw rates and the extent of transient incision and associated landsliding in the catchments. We show that the low-relief sub-catchments above knickpoints erode at uniform background rates of similar to 0.10 mm/yr, while downstream of knickpoints, erosion removes similar to 50% of the rock uplifted by the faults, at rates of 0.10-0.64 mm/yr. Despite widespread landsliding, CRN samples provide relatively consistent and accurate erosion rates, most likely because landslides are frequent, small, and shallow, and represent the integrated record of landsliding over several seismic cycles. Consequently, we combine these validated Be-10 erosion rates and data from a geomorphological landslide inventory in a published numerical model, to gain further insight into the long-term landslide rates and sediment mixing, highlighting the potential of CRN data to study landslide dynamics. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - erosion rates KW - normal faults KW - incision KW - landslides KW - transient response Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2018.11.032 SN - 0012-821X SN - 1385-013X VL - 507 SP - 140 EP - 153 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Rosenwinkel, Swenja A1 - Landgraf, Angela A1 - Schwanghart, Wolfgang A1 - Volkmer, Friedrich A1 - Dzhumabaeva, Atyrgul A1 - Merchel, Silke A1 - Rugel, Georg A1 - Preusser, Frank A1 - Korup, Oliver T1 - Late Pleistocene outburst floods from Issyk Kul, Kyrgyzstan? JF - Earth surface processes and landforms : the journal of the British Geomorphological Research Group KW - outburst flood KW - lake-level changes KW - Issyk Kul KW - Kyrgyzstan KW - cosmogenic nuclides Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/esp.4109 SN - 0197-9337 SN - 1096-9837 VL - 42 SP - 1535 EP - 1548 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Dey, Saptarshi A1 - Thiede, Rasmus Christoph A1 - Schildgen, Taylor F. A1 - Wittmann, Hella A1 - Bookhagen, Bodo A1 - Scherler, Dirk A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Holocene internal shortening within the northwest Sub-Himalaya: Out-of-sequence faulting of the Jwalamukhi Thrust, India JF - Tectonics N2 - The southernmost thrust of the Himalayan orogenic wedge that separates the foreland from the orogen, the Main Frontal Thrust, is thought to accommodate most of the ongoing crustal shortening in the Sub-Himalaya. Steepened longitudinal river profile segments, terrace offsets, and back-tilted fluvial terraces within the Kangra reentrant of the NW Sub-Himalaya suggest Holocene activity of the Jwalamukhi Thrust (JMT) and other thrust faults that may be associated with strain partitioning along the toe of the Himalayan wedge. To assess the shortening accommodated by the JMT, we combine morphometric terrain analyses with in situ Be-10-based surface-exposure dating of the deformed terraces. Incision into upper Pleistocene sediments within the Kangra Basin created two late Pleistocene terrace levels (T1 and T2). Subsequent early Holocene aggradation shortly before similar to 10ka was followed by episodic reincision, which created four cut-and-fill terrace levels, the oldest of which (T3) was formed at 10.10.9ka. A vertical offset of 445m of terrace T3 across the JMT indicates a shortening rate of 5.60.8 to 7.51.1mma(-1) over the last similar to 10ka. This result suggests that thrusting along the JMT accommodates 40-60% of the total Sub-Himalayan shortening in the Kangra reentrant over the Holocene. We speculate that this out-of-sequence shortening may have been triggered or at least enhanced by late Pleistocene and Holocene erosion of sediments from the Kangra Basin. KW - fluvial terrace KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - steepness index KW - Jwalamukhi Thrust KW - shortening KW - orogenic wedge Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2015TC004002 SN - 0278-7407 SN - 1944-9194 VL - 35 SP - 2677 EP - 2697 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - THES A1 - Eugster, Patricia T1 - Landscape evolution in the western Indian Himalaya since the Miocene T1 - Landschaftsentwicklung im westlichen indischen Himalaja seit dem Miozän N2 - The Himalayan arc stretches >2500 km from east to west at the southern edge of the Tibetan Plateau, representing one of the most important Cenozoic continent-continent collisional orogens. Internal deformation processes and climatic factors, which drive weathering, denudation, and transport, influence the growth and erosion of the orogen. During glacial times wet-based glaciers sculpted the mountain range and left overdeepend and U-shaped valleys, which were backfilled during interglacial times with paraglacial sediments over several cycles. These sediments partially still remain within the valleys because of insufficient evacuation capabilities into the foreland. Climatic processes overlay long-term tectonic processes responsible for uplift and exhumation caused by convergence. Possible processes accommodating convergence within the orogenic wedge along the main Himalayan faults, which divide the range into four major lithologic units, are debated. In this context, the identification of processes shaping the Earth’s surface on short- and on long-term are crucial to understand the growth of the orogen and implications for landscape development in various sectors along the arc. This thesis focuses on both surface and tectonic processes that shape the landscape in the western Indian Himalaya since late Miocene. In my first study, I dated well-preserved glacially polished bedrock on high-elevated ridges and valley walls in the upper of the Chandra Valley the by means of 10Be terrestrial cosmogenic radionuclides (TCN). I used these ages and mapped glacial features to reconstruct the extent and timing of Pleistocene glaciation at the southern front of the Himalaya. I was able to reconstruct an extensive valley glacier of ~200 km length and >1000 m thickness. Deglaciation of the Chandra Valley glacier started subsequently to insolation increase on the Northern Hemisphere and thus responded to temperature increase. I showed that the timing this deglaciation onset was coeval with retreat of further midlatitude glaciers on the Northern and Southern Hemispheres. These comparisons also showed that the post-LGM deglaciation very rapid, occurred within a few thousand years, and was nearly finished prior to the Bølling/Allerød interstadial. A second study (co-authorship) investigates how glacial advances and retreats in high mountain environments impact the landscape. By 10Be TCN dating and geomorphic mapping, we obtained maximal length and height of the Siachen Glacier within the Nubra Valley. Today the Shyok and Nubra confluence is backfilled with sedimentary deposits, which are attributed to the valley blocking of the Siachen Glacier 900 m above the present day river level. A glacial dam of the Siachen Glacier blocked the Shyok River and lead to the evolution of a more than 20 km long lake. Fluvial and lacustrine deposits in the valley document alternating draining and filling cycles of the lake dammed by the Siachen Glacier. In this study, we can show that glacial incision was outpacing fluvial incision. In the third study, which spans the million-year timescale, I focus on exhumation and erosion within the Chandra and Beas valleys. In this study the position and discussed possible reasons of rapidly exhuming rocks, several 100-km away from one of the main Himalayan faults (MFT) using Apatite Fission Track (AFT) thermochronometry. The newly gained AFT ages indicate rapid exhumation and confirm earlier studies in the Chandra Valley. I assume that the rapid exhumation is most likely related to uplift over subsurface structures. I tested this hypothesis by combining further low-temperature thermochronometers from areas east and west of my study area. By comparing two transects, each parallel to the Beas/Chandra Valley transect, I demonstrate similarities in the exhumation pattern to transects across the Sutlej region, and strong dissimilarities in the transect crossing the Dhauladar Range. I conclude that the belt of rapid exhumation terminates at the western end of the Kullu-Rampur window. Therewith, I corroborate earlier studies suggesting changes in exhumation behavior in the western Himalaya. Furthermore, I discussed several causes responsible for the pronounced change in exhumation patterns along strike: 1) the role of inherited pre-collisional features such as the Proterozoic sedimentary cover of the Indian basement, former ridges and geological structures, and 2) the variability of convergence rates along the Himalayan arc due to an increased oblique component towards the syntaxis. The combination of field observations (geological and geomorphological mapping) and methods to constrain short- and long-term processes (10Be, AFT) help to understand the role of the individual contributors to exhumation and erosion in the western Indian Himalaya. With the results of this thesis, I emphasize the importance of glacial and tectonic processes in shaping the landscape by driving exhumation and erosion in the studied areas. N2 - Der Himalaja, eines der wichtigsten känozoischen Kontinent-Kontinent Kollisionsgebirgen, erstreckt sich über 2500 km entlang des südlichen Randes des Tibetischen Plateaus von Ost nach West. Die Gebirgsbildung wird durch interne Deformationsprozesse und klimatische Faktoren, welche auf Verwitterung, Abtragung und Transport wirken, beeinflusst. In einem Zyklus von Eis- und Warmzeiten wurde die Landschaft durch Gletscher geformt. U-Täler sind noch heute erhaltene Spuren der Gletscher, die in den Warmzeiten durch abgetragene Sedimente verfüllt wurden. Diese Sedimente befinden sich teilweise bis heute in diesen übertieften Tälern, weil es an Kapazitäten zur Ausräumung der Täler ins Vorland mangelt. Die kurz-skaligen klimatischen Prozesse überlagern sich mit langzeitlichen tektonischen Prozessen wie Hebung und Exhumation, die durch Konvergenz verursacht werden. Im Zusammenhang mit dem Gebirgswachstum ist es entscheidend die Prozesse, welche die Erdoberfläche sowohl über kurze wie auch über längere Zeiträume formen zu bestimmen und damit auch deren Auswirkungen auf die Landschaftsentwicklung in den einzelnen Abschnitten des Gebirgsbogens. Diese Dissertation fokussiert auf tektonische und Erdoberflächenprozesse, welche den westlichen indischen Himalaja seit dem Miozän geprägt und beeinflusst haben. In der ersten Studie, habe ich im oberen Chandratal mittels 10Be terrestrischen kosmogenen Nukliden (TCN) gut erhaltene vom Gletscher geschliffene und polierte Gesteinsoberflächen auf höher gelegenen Bergrücken und entlang der Talseiten datiert. Basierend auf diesen Altern und kartierten glazialen Landformen habe ich nicht nur die Ausdehnung, sondern auch den Zeitpunkt einer Vergletscherung an der südlichen Front des Himalajas rekonstruiert. Dieser rekonstruierte Gletscher hat im Chandratal eine maximale Länge von ~200 km und >1000 m Dicke erreicht. Die Enteisung des Chandratales folgte dem Anstieg der Sonneneinstrahlung und somit der Temperaturerwärmung auf der nördlichen Hemisphäre. Der Zeitpunkt des Enteisungsbeginns stimmt mit dem Rückgang weiterer Gletscher der mittleren Breiten auf der südlichen wie auch auf der nördlichen Hemisphäre überein. Diese Vergleiche zeigen auch, dass die Enteisung der letzteiszeitlichen Vergletscherung schon vor dem Bølling/Allerød Stadium nahezu abgeschlossen war. In einer zweiten Studie (Ko-Autorenschaft) wird untersucht, wie Gletscher die Erdoberfläche formen und wie Gletschervorstöße und -rückzüge die Landschaft in alpinen Regionen beeinflussen. Die maximale Länge des Siachen Gletschers im Nubratal wurde auf mehr als 180 km rekonstruiert. Heute ist der Zusammenfluss der Flüsse Shyok und Nubra mit Sedimenten verfüllt, deren Ablagerung mit einer Blockierung des Tales durch den Siachen Gletscher bis zu 900 m über der heutigen Flusshöhe zusammenhängen. Demzufolge, staute der Siachen Gletscher den Fluss Shyok. Fluviatile und lakustrine Ablagerungen im Tal dokumentieren sich wechselnde Entleerungs- und Auffüllungszyklen dieses Gletscherstausees. In dieser Studie, konnte ebenso gezeigt werden, dass fluviatile Erosion durch die glaziale Erosion überholt wird. Über den längeren Zeitraum (Jahrmillionen) fokussiere ich auf Exhumation und Erosion in den Tälern Chandra und Beas. In dieser dritten Studie war es mir möglich mittels Apatit-Spaltspurdatierung (AFT) die Lage und Gründe der schnellen Exhumation in diesem Bereich, einige hundert Kilometer entfernt einer der Hauptstörungen des Himalajas (MFT), zu beschreiben. Die neuen AFT Alter deuten auf schnelle Exhumation hin und bestätigen frühere Studien aus dem Chandratal. Ich vermute, dass diese schnelle Exhumation mit einer Bewegung über eine krustale Rampe im Zusammenhang steht, welche auch im östlich anschließenden Sutlej Tal ausgeprägt ist. Diese Hypothese wurde durch die Kombination weiterer tieftemperatur Thermochronometer aus benachbarten Gebieten untersucht. Durch den Vergleich zweier Profile, welche parallel zum Chandra/Beas-Profil laufen wurden im östliche gelegenen Sutlej Gebiet ähnliche Exhumationsmuster gefunden. Daraus schließe ich, das Ende es "rapid exhumation belt" westlich des Kullu-Rampur Fensters im Beastal und bestätige damit auch frühere Studien. Im Weiteren wurden verschiedene Gründe wie ehemalige prä-kollisionale Strukturen und Sedimentbecken oder die abnehmende frontale Konvergenz gegen Westen diskutiert, welche sich Möglicherweise verantwortlich zeichnen für den Wechsel des Exhumationsverhaltens entlang des Streichens des Himalaja. Die Kombination aus Feldbeobachtungen (geologische und geomorphologische Kartierung) und Methoden, die über kurze und längere Zeiträume Prozesse auflösen (10Be, AFT), unterstützen die Erkenntnisse über die Rollenverteilung der einzelnen Akteure bezüglich Exhumation und Erosion im westlichen indischen Himalaja. Die Ergebnisse dieser Doktorarbeit heben die Wichtigkeit glazialer als auch tektonischer Prozesse als Steuerelemente von Exhumation und Erosion im Studiengebiet hervor. KW - Geologie KW - Himalaja KW - Thermochronologie KW - kosmogene Nuklide KW - Gletscher KW - geology KW - Himalaya KW - thermochronology KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - glaciers Y1 - 2018 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-420329 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Kober, Florian A1 - Zeilinger, Gerold A1 - Hippe, Kristina A1 - Marc, Odin A1 - Lendzioch, Theodora A1 - Grischott, Reto A1 - Christl, Marcus A1 - Kubik, Peter W. A1 - Zola, Ramiro T1 - Tectonic and lithological controls on denudation rates in the central Bolivian Andes JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - The topographic signature of a mountain belt depends on the interplay of tectonic, climatic and erosional processes, whose relative importance changes over times, while quantifying these processes and their rates at specific times remains a challenge. The eastern Andes of central Bolivia offer a natural laboratory in which such interplay has been debated. Here, we investigate the Rio Grande catchment which crosses orthogonally the eastern Andes orogen from the Eastern Cordillera into the Subandean Zone, exhibiting a catchment relief of up to 5000 m. Despite an enhanced tectonic activity in the Subandes, local relief, mean and modal slopes and channel steepness indices are largely similar compared to the Eastern Cordillera and the intervening Interandean Zone. Nevertheless, a dataset of 57 new cosmogenic 10Be and 26AI catchment wide denudation rates from the Rio Grande catchment reveals up to one order of magnitude higher denudation rates in the Subandean Zone (mean 0.8 mm/yr) compared to the upstream physiographic regions. We infer that tectonic activity in the thrusting dominated Subandean belt causes higher denudation rates based on cumulative rock uplift investigations and due to the absence of a pronounced climate gradient. Furthermore, the lower rock strength of the Subandean sedimentary units correlates with mean slopes similar to the ones of the Eastern Cordillera and Interandean Zone, highlighting the fact, that lithology and rock strength can control high denudation rates at low slopes. Low denudation rates measured at the outlet of the Rio Grande catchment (Abapo) are interpreted to be a result of a biased cosmogenic nuclide mixing that is dominated by headwater signals from the Eastern Cordillera and the Interandean zone and limited catchment sediment connectivity in the lower river reaches. Therefore, comparisons of short- (i.e., sediment yield) and millennial denudation rates require caution when postulating tectonic and/or climatic forcing without detailed studies. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - Rio Grande KW - seismicity KW - uplift KW - rock strength KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - denudation Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2015.06.037 SN - 0040-1951 SN - 1879-3266 VL - 657 SP - 230 EP - 244 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Scherler, Dirk A1 - Bookhagen, Bodo A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Tectonic control on Be-10-derived erosion rates in the Garhwal Himalaya, India JF - Journal of geophysical research : Earth surface N2 - Erosion in the Himalaya is responsible for one of the greatest mass redistributions on Earth and has fueled models of feedback loops between climate and tectonics. Although the general trends of erosion across the Himalaya are reasonably well known, the relative importance of factors controlling erosion is less well constrained. Here we present 25 Be-10-derived catchment-averaged erosion rates from the Yamuna catchment in the Garhwal Himalaya, northern India. Tributary erosion rates range between similar to 0.1 and 0.5mmyr(-1) in the Lesser Himalaya and similar to 1 and 2mmyr(-1) in the High Himalaya, despite uniform hillslope angles. The erosion-rate data correlate with catchment-averaged values of 5 km radius relief, channel steepness indices, and specific stream power but to varying degrees of nonlinearity. Similar nonlinear relationships and coefficients of determination suggest that topographic steepness is the major control on the spatial variability of erosion and that twofold to threefold differences in annual runoff are of minor importance in this area. Instead, the spatial distribution of erosion in the study area is consistent with a tectonic model in which the rock uplift pattern is largely controlled by the shortening rate and the geometry of the Main Himalayan Thrust fault (MHT). Our data support a shallow dip of the MHT underneath the Lesser Himalaya, followed by a midcrustal ramp underneath the High Himalaya, as indicated by geophysical data. Finally, analysis of sample results from larger main stem rivers indicates significant variability of Be-10-derived erosion rates, possibly related to nonproportional sediment supply from different tributaries and incomplete mixing in main stem channels. KW - Himalaya KW - erosion KW - tectonics KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - channel steepness KW - stream power Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/2013JF002955 SN - 2169-9003 SN - 2169-9011 VL - 119 IS - 2 SP - 83 EP - 105 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Schildgen, Taylor F. A1 - Cosentino, D. A1 - Bookhagen, Bodo A1 - Niedermann, Samuel A1 - Yildirim, C. A1 - Echtler, Helmut Peter A1 - Wittmann, Hella A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Multi-phased uplift of the southern margin of the Central Anatolian plateau, Turkey a record of tectonic and upper mantle processes JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - Uplifted Neogene marine sediments and Quaternary fluvial terraces in the Mut Basin, southern Turkey, reveal a detailed history of surface uplift along the southern margin of the Central Anatolian plateau from the Late Miocene to the present. New surface exposure ages (Be-10, Al-26, and Ne-21) of gravels capping fluvial strath terraces located between 28 and 135 m above the Goksu River in the Mut Basin yield ages ranging from ca. 25 to 130 ka, corresponding to an average incision rate of 0.52 to 0.67 mm/yr. Published biostratigraphic data combined with new interpretations of the fossil assemblages from uplifted marine sediments reveal average uplift rates of 0.25 to 0.37 mm/yr since Late Miocene time (starting between 8 and 5.45 Ma), and 0.72 to 0.74 mm/yr after 1.66 to 1.62 Ma. Together with the terrace abandonment ages, the data imply 0.6 to 0.7 mm/yr uplift rates from 1.6 Ma to the present. The different post-Late Miocene and post-1.6 Ma uplift rates can imply increasing uplift rates through time, or multi-phased uplift with slow uplift or subsidence in between. Longitudinal profiles of rivers in the upper catchment of the Mut and Ermenek basins show no apparent lithologic or fault control on some knickpoints that occur at 1.2 to 1.5 km elevation, implying a transient response to a change in uplift rates. Projections of graded upper relict channel segments to the modern outlet, together with constraints from uplifted marine sediments, show that a slower incision/uplift rate of 0.1 to 0.2 mm/yr preceded the 0.7 mm/yr uplift rate. The river morphology and profile projections therefore reflect multi-phased uplift of the plateau margin, rather than steadily increasing uplift rates. Multi-phased uplift can be explained by lithospheric slab break-off and possibly also the arrival of the Eratosthenes Seamount at the collision zone south of Cyprus. KW - Central Anatolian plateau KW - uplift KW - fluvial strath terraces KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - biostratigraphy KW - channel projection Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.12.003 SN - 0012-821X VL - 317 SP - 85 EP - 95 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Miller, Scott R. A1 - Sak, Peter B. A1 - Kirby, Eric A1 - Bierman, Paul R. T1 - Neogene rejuvenation of central appalachian topography evidence for differential rock uplift from stream profiles and erosion rates JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - The persistence of topography within ancient orogens remains one of the outstanding questions in landscape evolution. In the eastern North American Appalachians, this question is manifest in the outstanding problem of whether topographic relief is in a quasi-equilibrium state, decaying slowly over many millennia, or whether relief has increased during the late Cenozoic. Here we present quantitative geomorphic data from the nonglaciated portion of the Susquehanna River drainage basin that provide insight into these end-member models. Analysis of channel profiles draining upland catchments in the northern Valley and Ridge, Appalachian Plateau, Blue Ridge, and Piedmont provinces reveals that a large number of streams have well defined knickpoints clustered at 300-600 m elevation but not systematically associated with transitions from weak to resistant substrate. Cosmogenic Be-10 inventories of modern stream sediment indicate that erosion rates are spatially variable, ranging from similar to 5-30 m/Myr above knickpoints to similar to 50-100 m/Myr below knickpoints. Overall, channel gradients, normalized for drainage area, scale linearly with catchment-averaged erosion rates. Collectively, regionally consistent spatial relationships among erosion rate, channel steepness, and knickpoints reveal an ongoing wave of transient channel adjustment to a change in relative base level. Reconstructions of relict channel profiles above knickpoints suggest that higher rates of incision are associated with similar to 100-150 m of relative base level fall that accompanied epierogenic rock uplift rather than a change to a more erosive climate or drainage reorganization. Channel response timescales imply that the onset of relative base level change predates similar to 3.5 Ma and may have begun as early as similar to 15 Ma. We suggest that adjustment of the channel network was likely driven by changes in mantle dynamics along the eastern seaboard of North America during the Neogene. KW - Appalachian Mountains KW - stream profile KW - knickpoint KW - transient erosion KW - cosmogenic nuclides Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2013.04.007 SN - 0012-821X SN - 1385-013X VL - 369 IS - 2 SP - 1 EP - 12 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - THES A1 - Mey, Jürgen T1 - Intermontane valley fills T1 - Intermontane Talverfüllungen BT - recorders of climate, tectonics and landscape evolution BT - Zeugen von Klima, Tektonik und Landschaftsentwicklung N2 - Sedimentary valley fills are a widespread characteristic of mountain belts around the world. They transiently store material over time spans ranging from thousands to millions of years and therefore play an important role in modulating the sediment flux from the orogen to the foreland and to oceanic depocenters. In most cases, their formation can be attributed to specific fluvial conditions, which are closely related to climatic and tectonic processes. Hence, valley-fill deposits constitute valuable archives that offer fundamental insight into landscape evolution, and their study may help to assess the impact of future climate change on sediment dynamics. In this thesis I analyzed intermontane valley-fill deposits to constrain different aspects of the climatic and tectonic history of mountain belts over multiple timescales. First, I developed a method to estimate the thickness distribution of valley fills using artificial neural networks (ANNs). Based on the assumption of geometrical similarity between exposed and buried parts of the landscape, this novel and highly automated technique allows reconstructing fill thickness and bedrock topography on the scale of catchments to entire mountain belts. Second, I used the new method for estimating the spatial distribution of post-glacial sediments that are stored in the entire European Alps. A comparison with data from exploratory drillings and from geophysical surveys revealed that the model reproduces the measurements with a root mean squared error (RMSE) of 70m and a coefficient of determination (R2) of 0.81. I used the derived sediment thickness estimates in combination with a model of the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) icecap to infer the lithospheric response to deglaciation, erosion and deposition, and deduce their relative contribution to the present-day rock-uplift rate. For a range of different lithospheric and upper mantle-material properties, the results suggest that the long-wavelength uplift signal can be explained by glacial isostatic adjustment with a small erosional contribution and a substantial but localized tectonic component exceeding 50% in parts of the Eastern Alps and in the Swiss Rhône Valley. Furthermore, this study reveals the particular importance of deconvolving the potential components of rock uplift when interpreting recent movements along active orogens and how this can be used to constrain physical properties of the Earth’s interior. In a third study, I used the ANN approach to estimate the sediment thickness of alluviated reaches of the Yarlung Tsangpo River, upstream of the rapidly uplifting Namche Barwa massif. This allowed my colleagues and me to reconstruct the ancient river profile of the Yarlung Tsangpo, and to show that in the past, the river had already been deeply incised into the eastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau. Dating of basal sediments from drill cores that reached the paleo-river bed to 2–2.5 Ma are consistent with mineral cooling ages from the Namche Barwa massif, which indicate initiation of rapid uplift at ~4 Ma. Hence, formation of the Tsangpo gorge and aggradation of the voluminous valley fill was most probably a consequence of rapid uplift of the Namche Barwa massif and thus tectonic activity. The fourth and last study focuses on the interaction of fluvial and glacial processes at the southeastern edge of the Karakoram. Paleo-ice-extent indicators and remnants of a more than 400-m-thick fluvio-lacustrine valley fill point to blockage of the Shyok River, a main tributary of the upper Indus, by the Siachen Glacier, which is the largest glacier in the Karakoram Range. Field observations and 10Be exposure dating attest to a period of recurring lake formation and outburst flooding during the penultimate glaciation prior to ~110 ka. The interaction of Rivers and Glaciers all along the Karakorum is considered a key factor in landscape evolution and presumably promoted headward erosion of the Indus-Shyok drainage system into the western margin of the Tibetan Plateau. The results of this thesis highlight the strong influence of glaciation and tectonics on valley-fill formation and how this has affected the evolution of different mountain belts. In the Alps valley-fill deposition influenced the magnitude and pattern of rock uplift since ice retreat approximately 17,000 years ago. Conversely, the analyzed valley fills in the Himalaya are much older and reflect environmental conditions that prevailed at ~110 ka and ~2.5 Ma, respectively. Thus, the newly developed method has proven useful for inferring the role of sedimentary valley-fill deposits in landscape evolution on timescales ranging from 1,000 to 10,000,000 years. N2 - Sedimentäre Talverfüllungen sind ein häufiges Merkmal von Gebirgen auf der ganzen Welt. Sie speichern Abtragungsprodukte über Zeiträume von Tausenden bis Millionen von Jahren und beeinflussen den Sedimenttransport vom Gebirge in das Vorland und in die ozeanischen Becken. Die Bildung solcher Sedimentspeicher geht oft auf Zustände im fluvialen System zurück, welche mit bestimmten klimatischen und tektonischen Prozessen in Verbindung gebracht werden können. Talverfüllungen stellen daher wertvolle Archive dar, die über fundamentale Zusammenhänge in der Landschaftsgenese Aufschluss geben und deren Untersuchung dazu beiträgt, die Auswirkungen des Klimawandels auf die Sedimentdynamik im Gebirge zu prognostizieren. In dieser Arbeit untersuchte ich intermontane Talverfüllungen, um die klimatische und tektonische Geschichte von Gebirgszügen über mehrere Zeitskalen hinweg zu ermitteln. Zuerst entwickelte ich eine Methode zur Abschätzung von Sedimentmächtigkeiten mit Hilfe von künstlichen neuralen Netzen, die auf der Annahme basiert, dass sich die zugeschütteten und die freiliegenden Bereiche der Landschaft geometrisch ähneln. Diese neuartige und hochautomatisierte Methode macht es möglich, Sedimentmächtigkeiten und Untergrundtopographien für einzelne Einzugsgebiete bis hin zu ganzen Gebirgen abzuschätzen. Als zweites benutzte ich die neue Methode, um die Mächtigkeitsverteilung der postglazialen Sedimentspeicher in den Europäischen Alpen zu rekonstruieren. Ein Vergleich mit Daten aus Bohrlochmessungen und geophysikalischen Explorationen zeigte, dass das Modell die gemessenen Mächtigkeiten mit einem quadratischen Mittelwert des Fehlers (RMSE) von 70m und einem Bestimmtheitsmaß (R2) von 0.81 reproduziert. Ich verwendete diese Sedimentverteilung in Kombination mit einem Modell der alpinen Eiskappe des letzten glazialen Maximums (LGM), um die Reaktion der Lithosphäre auf Abschmelzen, Erosion und Ablagerung zu berechnen und deren Beiträge zur derzeitigen Gesteinshebung abzuleiten. Unter Berücksichtigung einer Reihe verschiedener Eigenschaften der Lithosphäre und des oberen Erdmantels zeigten die Resultate, dass das langwellige Hebungsmuster im Wesentlichen durch Glazialisostasie erklärt werden kann und dass die Entlastung durch Erosion eine untergeordnete Rolle spielt. Darüber hinaus postulierte ich eine tektonische Komponente von über 50% in Teilen der Ostalpen und im Schweizer Rhône Tal. Die Studie verdeutlicht, dass die Entflechtung der Prozesse, die zur Gesteinshebung beitragen, eine entscheidende Rolle spielt bei der Interpretation rezenter Bewegungen entlang aktiver Orogene und bei der Abschätzung von physikalischen Eigenschaften des Erdinneren. Im dritten Teil berechnete ich die Mächtigkeitsverteilung der sedimentären Talverfüllung des Yarlung Tsangpo Tales oberhalb des Namche Barwa Massivs am östlichen Rand des Tibet Plateaus. Dies ermöglichte meinen Kollegen und mir das ehemalige Flusslängsprofil zu rekonstruieren und zu zeigen, dass sich der Yarlung Tsangpo in der Vergangenheit bereits tief in den östlichen Rand des Tibet Plateaus einschnitt. Die Basis der Sedimente wurde erbohrt und beprobt und deren Ablagerung auf 2–2.5 Ma datiert was konsistent mit Abkühlungsaltern von Mineralen des Namche Barwa Massivs ist, die auf den Beginn einer beschleunigten Hebung vor ~4 Ma hindeuten. Dies führte zu der Schlussfolgerung, dass die Bildung der Tsangpo Schlucht und die Aggradation der Talsedimente höchstwahrscheinlich in Folge der schnellen Hebung des Namche Barwa Massivs geschah, welche letztendlich auf tektonische Aktivität zurück geht. Der vierte und letzte Teil behandelt die Interaktion fluvialer und glazialer Prozesse am südöstlichen Rand des Karakorums. Indikatoren für die frühere Eisausdehnung und die Überreste einer bis zu 400m mächtigen fluvio-lakustrinen Talverfüllung weisen auf eine Blockade des Shyok, eines Hauptzuflusses es Oberen Indus, durch den Siachen Gletscher, den größten Gletscher des Karakorums, hin. Weitere Geländebefunde und Oberflächendatierungen mittels kosmogenem 10Be bezeugen, dass es während des vorletzten Glaziales zu einem mehrfachen Aufstauen des Shyok und damit assoziierten Seeausbrüchen gekommen ist. Das Zusammenwirken von Flüssen und Gletschern entlang des Karakorums war maßgeblich für die Landschaftsentwicklung und führte möglicherweise zum Einschneiden von Tälern in den westlichen Rand des Tibet Plateaus. Die vorliegende Arbeit unterstreicht die Bedeutung von Vergletscherung und Tektonik bei der Bildung von intermontanen Sedimentspeichern und deren Einwirken auf die Entwicklung zweier Gebirge. In den Alpen beeinflusst die Ablagerung von Talfüllungen die Raten und das Muster der Gesteinshebung seit Rückzug des Eises vor ca. 17,000 Jahren. Demgegenüber sind die in dieser Arbeit betrachteten Talfüllungen des Himalayas weit älter und geben Aufschluss über die Umweltbedingungen vor jeweils 110 ka und 2.5 Ma. Es zeigt sich, dass die neue Methode zur Abschätzung von Mächtigkeiten und Volumina intermontaner Talverfüllungen dazu beiträgt, die Landschaftsentwicklung über Zeiträume von 1,000 bis 10,000,000 Jahren zu rekonstruieren. KW - intermontane valley fill KW - sediment thickness KW - bedrock elevation KW - artificial neural networks KW - sediment volume KW - landscape evolution KW - glacial isostatic adjustment KW - isostatic uplift KW - LGM KW - Ice model KW - European Alps KW - outburst floods KW - glacial incision KW - Tibetan Plateau KW - Shyok River KW - cosmogenic nuclides KW - exposure age dating KW - ice dam KW - Karakoram KW - Namche Barwa KW - Yarlung-Tsangpo Gorge KW - burial dating KW - tectonic uplift KW - syntaxis KW - intermontane Talverfüllungen KW - Sedimentmächtigkeit KW - Grundgesteinshöhe KW - künstliche neurale Netzwerke KW - Sedimentvolumen KW - Landschaftsentwicklung KW - Glazialisostasie KW - isostatische Hebung KW - LGM KW - Eismodell KW - Europäische Alpen KW - Seeausbrüche KW - glaziale Einschneidung KW - Tibet Plateau KW - Shyok Fluss KW - kosmogene Nuklide KW - Expositionsaltersdatierung KW - Eisdamm KW - Karakorum KW - Namche Barwa KW - Yarlung-Tsangpo Schlucht KW - Verschüttungsaltersdatierung KW - tektonische Hebung KW - Syntaxe Y1 - 2017 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-103158 ER -