2020
DOI: 10.1002/esp.4851
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Reconstructing fluvial incision rates based on palaeo‐water tables in chalk karst networks along the Seine valley (Normandy, France)

Abstract: Quantifying rates of river incision and continental uplift over Quaternary timescales offer the potential for modelling landscape change due to tectonic and climatic forcing. In many areas, river terraces form datable archives that help constrain the timing and rate of valley incision. However, old river terraces, with high‐level deposits, are prone to weathering and often lack datable material. Where valleys are incised through karst areas, caves and sediments can be used to reconstruct the landscape evolutio… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Cave development is linked to the Quaternary incision of the Seine River, which defines the regional base level. During the last one million years, repeated phases of cave formation, cold-stage valley incision and subsequent terrace aggradation, followed by renewed conduit development has created a stacked sequence of ancient cave levels preserved between 5 and 100 m altitude above current base level (Nehme et al, 2020). Cave development is also influenced by the influx of sediment into the conduit system from the overlying Cenozoic cover (Chédeville et al, 2015).…”
Section: Chalk Aquifer and Cave Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Cave development is linked to the Quaternary incision of the Seine River, which defines the regional base level. During the last one million years, repeated phases of cave formation, cold-stage valley incision and subsequent terrace aggradation, followed by renewed conduit development has created a stacked sequence of ancient cave levels preserved between 5 and 100 m altitude above current base level (Nehme et al, 2020). Cave development is also influenced by the influx of sediment into the conduit system from the overlying Cenozoic cover (Chédeville et al, 2015).…”
Section: Chalk Aquifer and Cave Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Repeated influxes of sediment into phreatic conduits causes dissolution to be focused upwards on the conduit ceiling as the passage floors are mantled with sediment. Over time, this leads to the upwards enlargement of the conduit, a process known as paragenesis (Farrant & Smart, 2011;Nehme et al, 2020), also named per ascensum speleogenesis (Mocochain et al, 2009) or antigravitative erosion (Pasini, 2009). Paragenetic cave development is common in the Normandy chalk caves.…”
Section: Chalk Aquifer and Cave Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%
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