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Landscape response to tectonic forcing: Digital elevation model analysis of stream profiles in the Mendocino triple junction region, northern California

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TLDR
In this article, the authors evaluate and calibrate the shear stress (or similar unit stream-power) bedrock-incision model by studying stream profiles in a tectonically active mountain range.
Abstract
The topographic evolution of orogens is fundamentally dictated by rates and patterns of bedrock-channel incision. Quantitative field assessments of process-based laws are needed to accurately describe landscape uplift and denudation in response to tectonics and climate. We evaluate and calibrate the shear stress (or similar unit stream-power) bedrock-incision model by studying stream profiles in a tectonically active mountain range. Previous work on emergent marine terraces in the Mendocino triple junction region of northern California provides spatial and temporal control on rock-uplift rates. Digital elevation models and field data are used to quantify differences in landscape morphology associated with along-strike northwest to southeast changes in tectonic and climatic conditions. Analysis of longitudinal profiles supports the hypothesis that the study-area channels are in equilibrium with current uplift and climatic conditions, consistent with theoretical calculations of system response time based on the shear-stress model. Within uncertainty, the profile concavity (𝛉) of the trunk streams is constant throughout the study area (𝛉 ≈ 0.43), as predicted by the model. Channel steepness correlates with uplift rate. These data help constrain the two key unknown model parameters, the coefficient of erosion ( K ) and the exponent associated with channel gradient ( n ). This analysis shows that K cannot be treated as a constant throughout the study area, despite generally homogeneous substrate properties. For a reasonable range of slope-exponent values ( n ), best-fit values of K are positively correlated with uplift rate. This correlation has important implications for landscape-evolution models and likely reflects dynamic adjustment of K to tectonic changes, due to variations in orographic precipitation, and perhaps channel width, sediment load, and frequency of debris flows. The apparent variation in K makes a unique value of n impossible to constrain with present data.

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Citations
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Experimental Channel Response to Tectonic Uplift

TL;DR: In this article, the relationship between channel geometry and tectonic forcing in steady state landscapes at various uplift rates was investigated using high-precision (0.5 mm pixel size) digital elevation models.
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Transient fluvial incision as an indicator of active faulting and Plio-Quaternary uplift of the Moroccan High Atlas.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors quantitatively analyse the long profiles of rivers that drain southwards across the South Atlas Fault (SAF), a thrust fault that forms the southern margin of the High Atlas Mountains in Morocco, to derive new data on the Late Cenozoic activity of this fault system.
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DEM-Based Analysis of Interactions between Tectonics and Landscapes in the Ore Mountains and Eger Rift (East Germany and NW Czech Republic)

TL;DR: This work proposes a new method to classify landscapes according to their erosional stages based on the combination of two DEM-based geomorphic indices: the hypsometric integral and surface roughness, which increases with the topographic elevation and the incision by the drainage network.
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Tectonic forcing of longitudinal valleys in the Himalaya: morphological analysis of the Ladakh Batholith, North India

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated geomorphic variations in transverse catchments that drain the Ladakh Batholith, into the Indus and Shyok rivers, and proposed that high sediment discharge from the deformed Indus Molasse Indus Valley has progressively raised base levels in the indus valley and resulted in sediment blanketing of the opposing tectonically quiescent catchments which drain southwestwards off the batholith.
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Tectonic effects on the longitudinal profiles of the Chaliyar River and its tributaries, southwest India

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied geomorphic aspects of the Chaliyar River by examining longitudinal profiles and drainage pattern in order to understand the rock uplift and river incision.
References
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TL;DR: A comprehensive review of the current literature associated with water resources can be found in this paper, but perhaps more importantly can also be used as an introductory working document in dealing with particular environmental problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tectonic forcing of late Cenozoic climate

TL;DR: In particular, tectonically driven increases in chemical weathering may have resulted in a decrease of atmospheric C02 concentration over the past 40 Myr as discussed by the authors. But this was not shown to be the case for the uplift of the Tibetan plateau and positive feedbacks initiated by this event.
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Channel-reach morphology in mountain drainage basins

TL;DR: In this article, a classification of channel-reach morphology in mountain drainage basins synthesizes stream morphologies into seven distinct reach types: colluvial, bedrock, and five alluvial channel types (cascade, step pool, plane bed, pool rime and dune ripple).
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Magnitude and Frequency of Forces in Geomorphic Processes

TL;DR: The relative importance in geomorphic processes of extreme or catastrophic events and more frequent events of smaller magnitude can be measured in terms of the relative amounts of "work" done on the landscape and the formation of specific features of the landscape as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dynamics of the stream‐power river incision model: Implications for height limits of mountain ranges, landscape response timescales, and research needs

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the stream power erosion model in an effort to elucidate its consequences in terms of large-scale topographic (fluvial) relief and its sensitivity to tectonic and climatic forcing.
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