2003
DOI: 10.1038/nature02187
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Decoupling of erosion and precipitation in the Himalayas

Abstract: The hypothesis that abrupt spatial gradients in erosion can cause high strain rates in active orogens has been supported by numerical models that couple erosional processes with lithospheric deformation via gravitational feedbacks. Most such models invoke a 'stream-power' rule, in which either increased discharge or steeper channel slopes cause higher erosion rates. Spatial variations in precipitation and slopes are therefore predicted to correlate with gradients in both erosion rates and crustal strain. Here … Show more

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Cited by 514 publications
(425 citation statements)
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“…The high erosion rates maintain material removal and deformation along the Alpine Fault [Koons, 1990;Beaumont et al, 1992]. Many recent studies also suggest that focused erosion along the Himalayan front also may have an effect on the nature and locus of the deformation [e.g., Thiede et al, 2004Thiede et al, , 2005Wobus et al, 2003Wobus et al, , 2005, although other authors argue against erosion playing such as controlling role [e.g., Burbank et al, 2003].…”
Section: Controls On Wedge Formmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The high erosion rates maintain material removal and deformation along the Alpine Fault [Koons, 1990;Beaumont et al, 1992]. Many recent studies also suggest that focused erosion along the Himalayan front also may have an effect on the nature and locus of the deformation [e.g., Thiede et al, 2004Thiede et al, , 2005Wobus et al, 2003Wobus et al, , 2005, although other authors argue against erosion playing such as controlling role [e.g., Burbank et al, 2003].…”
Section: Controls On Wedge Formmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, a profiling method that stack elevation values on parallel, equally-spaced tangents has been developed, i.e., the swath profile method. Applications of the swath profile method can often be found in the analysis of large-scale regional terrain issues, such as tectonic structures or landslides [44][45][46].…”
Section: Profilesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The provenance change is consistent with the broad climate change in the Late Miocene (Harrison et al, 1992;Molnar et al, 1993), which was affected significantly by increases in altitude of the plateau . Erosion patterns in southeastern Asia may have been related to rock uplift rates, but are presently not climatically controlled (Burbank et al, 2003;Hoang et al, 2009). Wan et al (2007) used a multi-proxy approach to reconstruct the past change of the East Asian monsoon since 20 Ma.…”
Section: Tectonic Implicationmentioning
confidence: 99%