Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan

We report measurements performed during two complete flow seasons on the Urumqi River, a proglacial mountain stream in the northeastern flank of the Tianshan, an active mountain range in Central Asia. This survey of flow dynamics and sediment transport (dissolved, suspended and bed loads), together...

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Main Authors: Y. Liu, F. Métivier, J. Gaillardet, B. Ye, P. Meunier, C. Narteau, E. Lajeunesse, T. Han, L. Malverti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2011-12-01
Series:Solid Earth
Online Access:http://www.solid-earth.net/2/283/2011/se-2-283-2011.pdf
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spelling doaj-e5b8403e181e421db20f7d071fa82a392020-11-25T01:32:42ZengCopernicus PublicationsSolid Earth1869-95101869-95292011-12-012228330110.5194/se-2-283-2011Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in TianshanY. LiuF. MétivierJ. GaillardetB. YeP. MeunierC. NarteauE. LajeunesseT. HanL. MalvertiWe report measurements performed during two complete flow seasons on the Urumqi River, a proglacial mountain stream in the northeastern flank of the Tianshan, an active mountain range in Central Asia. This survey of flow dynamics and sediment transport (dissolved, suspended and bed loads), together with a 25-year record of daily discharge, enables the assessment of secular denudation rates on this high mountain catchment of Central Asia. Our results show that chemical weathering accounts for more than one-third of the total denudation rate. Sediment transported as bed load cannot be neglected in the balance, given that sand and gravel transport accounts for one third of the solid load of the river. Overall, the mean denudation rates are low, averaging 46 t × km<sup>−2</sup> × yr<sup>−1</sup>(17–18 m Myr<sup>−1</sup>). We furthermore analyse the hydrologic record to show that the long-term sediment budget is not dominated by extreme and rare events but by the total amount of rainfall or annual runoff. The rates we obtain are in agreement with rates obtained from the mass balance reconstruction of the Plio-Quaternary gravely deposits of the foreland but signicantly lower than the rates recently obtained from cosmogenic dating of the Kuitun River sands, west of the Urumqi River. We show that the resolution of this incompatibility may have an important consquence for our understanding of the interplay between erosion and tectonics in the semi-humid ranges of Central Asia.http://www.solid-earth.net/2/283/2011/se-2-283-2011.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Y. Liu
F. Métivier
J. Gaillardet
B. Ye
P. Meunier
C. Narteau
E. Lajeunesse
T. Han
L. Malverti
spellingShingle Y. Liu
F. Métivier
J. Gaillardet
B. Ye
P. Meunier
C. Narteau
E. Lajeunesse
T. Han
L. Malverti
Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan
Solid Earth
author_facet Y. Liu
F. Métivier
J. Gaillardet
B. Ye
P. Meunier
C. Narteau
E. Lajeunesse
T. Han
L. Malverti
author_sort Y. Liu
title Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan
title_short Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan
title_full Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan
title_fullStr Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan
title_full_unstemmed Erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper Urumqi River in Tianshan
title_sort erosion rates deduced from seasonal mass balance along the upper urumqi river in tianshan
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Solid Earth
issn 1869-9510
1869-9529
publishDate 2011-12-01
description We report measurements performed during two complete flow seasons on the Urumqi River, a proglacial mountain stream in the northeastern flank of the Tianshan, an active mountain range in Central Asia. This survey of flow dynamics and sediment transport (dissolved, suspended and bed loads), together with a 25-year record of daily discharge, enables the assessment of secular denudation rates on this high mountain catchment of Central Asia. Our results show that chemical weathering accounts for more than one-third of the total denudation rate. Sediment transported as bed load cannot be neglected in the balance, given that sand and gravel transport accounts for one third of the solid load of the river. Overall, the mean denudation rates are low, averaging 46 t × km<sup>−2</sup> × yr<sup>−1</sup>(17–18 m Myr<sup>−1</sup>). We furthermore analyse the hydrologic record to show that the long-term sediment budget is not dominated by extreme and rare events but by the total amount of rainfall or annual runoff. The rates we obtain are in agreement with rates obtained from the mass balance reconstruction of the Plio-Quaternary gravely deposits of the foreland but signicantly lower than the rates recently obtained from cosmogenic dating of the Kuitun River sands, west of the Urumqi River. We show that the resolution of this incompatibility may have an important consquence for our understanding of the interplay between erosion and tectonics in the semi-humid ranges of Central Asia.
url http://www.solid-earth.net/2/283/2011/se-2-283-2011.pdf
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