The Himalayan mountains are dissected by some of the deepest and most impressive gorges on Earth. Constraining the interplay between river incision and rock uplift is important for understanding tectonic deformation in this region. We report here the discovery of a deeply incised canyon of the Yarlung Tsangpo River, at the eastern end of the Himalaya, which is now buried under more than 500 meters of sediments. By reconstructing the former valley bottom and dating sediments at the base of the valley fill, we show that steepening of the Tsangpo Gorge started at about 2 million to 2.5 million years ago as a consequence of an increase in rock uplift rates. The high erosion rates within the gorge are therefore a direct consequence of rapid rock uplift.
Following the last glacial maximum (LGM), the demise of continental ice sheets induced crustal rebound in tectonically stable regions of North America and Scandinavia that is still ongoing. Unlike the ice sheets, the Alpine ice cap developed in an orogen where the measured uplift is potentially attributed to tectonic shortening, lithospheric delamination and unloading due to deglaciation and erosion. Here we show that ∼90% of the geodetically measured rock uplift in the Alps can be explained by the Earth’s viscoelastic response to LGM deglaciation. We modelled rock uplift by reconstructing the Alpine ice cap, while accounting for postglacial erosion, sediment deposition and spatial variations in lithospheric rigidity. Clusters of excessive uplift in the Rhône Valley and in the Eastern Alps delineate regions potentially affected by mantle processes, crustal heterogeneity and active tectonics. Our study shows that even small LGM ice caps can dominate present-day rock uplift in tectonically active regions.
In the Central Andes, several studies on alluvial terraces and valley fills have linked sediment aggradation to periods of enhanced sediment supply. However, debate continues over whether tectonic or climatic factors are most important in triggering the enhanced supply. The Del Medio catchment in the Humahuaca Basin (Eastern Cordillera, NW Argentina) is located within a transition zone between subhumid and arid climates and hosts the only active debris‐flow fan within this intermontane valley. By combining 10Be analyses of boulder and sediment samples within the Del Medio catchment, with regional morphometric measurements of nearby catchments, we identify the surface processes responsible for aggradation in the Del Medio fan and their likely triggers. We find that the fan surface has been shaped by debris flows and channel avulsions during the last 400 years. Among potential tectonic, climatic, and autogenic factors that might influence deposition, our analyses point to a combination of several favorable factors that drive aggradation. These are in particular the impact of occasional abundant rainfall on steep slopes in rock types prone to failure, located in a region characterized by relatively low rainfall amounts and limited transport capacity. These characteristics are primarily associated with the climatic transition zone between the humid foreland and the arid orogen interior, which creates an imbalance between sediment supply and sediment transfer. The conditions and processes that drive aggradation in the Del Medio catchment today may provide a modern analog for the conditions and processes that drove aggradation in other nearby tributaries in the past.
Advances in cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating have made moraines valuable terrestrial recorders of palaeoclimate. A growing number of moraine chronologies reported from the Central Andes show that tropical glaciers responded sensitively to past changes in precipitation and temperature over timescales ranging from 10 3 to 10 5 years. However, the causes of past glaciation in the Central Andes remain uncertain. Explanations have invoked insolation-modulated variability in the strength of the South American Summer Monsoon, teleconnections with the North Atlantic Ocean, and/or cooling in the Southern Hemisphere.The driver for these past climate changes is difficult to identify, partly due to a lack of dated moraine records, especially in climatically sensitive areas of the southern Central Andes.Moreover, new constraints are needed on precisely where and when glaciers advanced. We use cosmogenic 10 Be produced in situ to determine exposure ages for three generations of moraines at the Sierra de Aconquija, situated at 27°S on the eastern flank of the southern Central Andes. These moraines record glacier advances at approximately 22 ka and 40 ka, coincident with summer insolation maxima in the sub-tropics of the Southern Hemisphere, as well as at 12.5 ka and 13.5 ka during the Younger Dryas and the Antarctic Cold Reversal, respectively. We also identify minor glaciation during Bond Event 5, also known as the 8.2 ka event. These moraines register past climate changes with high fidelity, and currently constitute the southernmost dated record of glaciation on the eastern flank of the Central Andes. To contextualise these results, we compile 10 Be data reported from 144 moraines in the eastern Central Andes that represent past glacier advances. We re-calculate exposure ages from these data using an updated reference production rate, and we re-interpret the moraine ages by taking the oldest clustered boulder age (after the exclusion of outliers attributed to nuclide inheritance) as closest to the timing of glacier advance-an approach for which we provide empirical justification. This compilation reveals that Central Andean glaciers have responded to changes in temperature and precipitation. We identify cross-latitude advances in phase with insolation cycles, the last global glacial maximum, and episodes of strengthened monsoonal moisture transport including the Younger Dryas and Heinrich Stadials 1 and 2. Our results from the Sierra de Aconquija allow us to constrain the southerly limit of enhanced precipitation associated with Heinrich Stadials at ~25°S. More broadly, our findings demonstrate at both local and regional scales that moraines record past climate variability with a fine spatial and temporal resolution.3
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