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Erosion rates across space and timescales from a multi-proxy study of rivers of eastern Taiwan.

Authors :
Fellin, Maria Giuditta
Chen, Chia-Yu
Willett, Sean D.
Christl, Marcus
Chen, Yue-Gau
Source :
Global & Planetary Change. Oct2017, Vol. 157, p174-193. 20p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We derive erosion rates from detrital zircon fission-track ages and cosmogenic nuclide concentrations from sediments from the modern rivers of eastern Taiwan in order to investigate how surface erosional processes vary in space and time across the young arc-continent collisional orogen of Taiwan. Taiwan is characterized by rapid rates of exhumation, a fluvial and landslide-dominated landscape, high seismicity, high relief and frequent typhoons. The obliquity between the convergence direction and the trend of the plate boundary provides a gradient in uplift and variations in longevity of orogenic activity with a young, immature orogen in the south, a mature orogen in central and northern Taiwan, and perhaps even the cessation of orogeny in the far north. The modern zircon fission-track detrital record is consistent with basement ages that show that much of the orogen is eroding at high rates with basin-wide mean zircon fission-track cooling ages as young as 0.9 Ma. The erosion rates derived from concentrations of cosmogenic nuclides ( 10 Be) provide erosion rates averaged over much shorter timescales, but these two proxies provide estimates of erosion rates that are within error of each other across most of the collisional belt. Erosion rates are lowest in the immature zone of the orogen (< 1 km/Ma) in southern Taiwan, and increase to values ≥ 4 km/Ma in central Taiwan. Geomorphic indices, in particular channel steepness, are also correlated with erosion rates, suggesting that fluvial erosion is the dominant exhumation process and that landscape evolution is reacting primarily to tectonic forcing, fast enough to keep the landscape in a state of quasi-equilibrium where erosion rates and rock uplift rates are nearly equal. We find no measurable effects due to rock erodibility or precipitation rate, but if these parameters co-vary with tectonic uplift rate, our data could not resolve the influence of each. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09218181
Volume :
157
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Global & Planetary Change
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
125525882
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2017.07.012