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Complex patterns of schist tor exposure and surface uplift, Otago (New Zealand).

Authors :
Raab, Gerald
Martin, Adam P.
Norton, Kevin P.
Christl, Marcus
Scarciglia, Fabio
Egli, Markus
Source :
Geomorphology. Sep2021, Vol. 389, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Landscapes are subjected to surface denudation during their complex and non-linear evolution. In order to quantify the in situ surface lowering and, thus, denudation or soil erosion rates, new, multi-millennia archives are needed and must be rigorously tested. Large residual rocks, tors, are the basis for the Tor Exhumation Approach. Here we present novel results on meta-sedimentary (schist) rock tors using this approach, which previously has only been applied in granitic terrains. The exhumation patterns of eight schist tors in three landscape locations (valley, ridge, distal) of Otago, New Zealand, were studied using cosmogenic dating. The in situ 10Be ages have high variability along individual vertical tor profiles. Average surface age is 122 ± 12 ka and ranges from 836 ± 89 ka to 19 ± 2 ka. The majority of investigated tors have surfaced during the MIS 5 which was one of the wettest and warmest climate periods. The resulting surface denudation trend of the three locations differs. The valley commenced denudation no earlier than ~200 ka with rates of ~0.22 [m kyr−1] to ~0.02 [m kyr−1]. In contrast, exposure started at the ridge position around 230 ka at ~0.03 [m kyr−1]. An age inversion found in the valley is considered to be the result of mushroom-like exposure by undercutting and repeated rock breakoffs. The distal site tor has been exhumed continuously for ~120 ka at a rate of ~0.2 to ~0.05 [m kyr−1]. We identified a mix of surface emergence patterns of the tors such as continuous-, mushroom-, tafoni- and structural-like. The comparison to modern erosion rates indicates that surface erosion has increased up to a factor of ten during the last few decades. To determine the actual surface uplift, we linked the tor derived surface denudation rates with rock uplift data. The data indicates that the surface uplift rates started to decrease during the Middle Pleistocene (0.04–0.09 [m kyr−1]), remained relatively low during the Late Pleistocene (~0.01 [m kyr−1]) and started to increase again during the Holocene (c. 0.21–0.64 [m kyr−1]). In summary, the emergence pattern of local tors enabled reconstruction of the evolution of Pleistocene-Holocene surfaces in East Otago. [Display omitted] • In situ 10Be ages determined on meta-sedimentary (schist) tors, New Zealand • Tors were primarily exposed during warm and humid MIS 5 (~130–71 ka). • Tor derived surface denudation rates range from ~0.04 to ~0.22 [m kyr−1]. • Surface erosion rates appear to have increased during the last few decades. • Climate and tectonic uplift drive tor exposure in Otago. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0169555X
Volume :
389
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geomorphology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
151832442
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2021.107849