4.5 Article

Paleo-denudation rates suggest variations in runoff drove aggradation during last glacial cycle, Crete, Greece

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 48, Issue 2, Pages 386-405

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.5492

Keywords

alluvial fan; cosmogenic nuclides; fluvial aggradation; incision; paleo-denudation rates; post-burial production; sediment supply

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This study quantifies sediment supply in alluvial channels of Crete and finds that past climate changes had little effect on landscape-wide denudation rates but exerted a strong control on the aggradation-incision behavior.
Fluvial aggradation and incision are often linked to Quaternary climate cycles, but it usually remains unclear whether variations in runoff or sediment supply or both drive channel response to climate variability. Here we quantify sediment supply with paleo-denudation rates and provide geochronological constraints on aggradation and incision from the Sfakia and Elafonisi alluvial-fan sequences in Crete, Greece. We report seven optically stimulated luminescence and ten radiocarbon ages, eight Be-10 and eight Cl-36 denudation rates from modern channel and terrace sediments. For five samples, Be-10 and Cl-36 were measured on the same sample by measuring Be-10 on chert and Cl-36 on calcite. Results indicate relatively steady denudation rates throughout the past 80 kyr, but the aggradation and incision history indicates a link with climate shifts. At the Elafonisi fan, we identify four periods of aggradation coinciding with Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 2, 4, 5a/b, and likely 6, and three periods of incision coinciding with MIS 1, 3, and likely 5e. At the Sfakia fan, rapid aggradation occurred during MIS 2 and 4, followed by incision during MIS 1. Nearby climate and vegetation records show that MIS 2, 4, and 6 stadials were characterized by cold and dry climates with sparse vegetation, whereas forest cover and more humid conditions prevailed during MIS 1, 3, and 5. Our data thus suggest that past changes in climate had little effect on landscape-wide denudation rates but exerted a strong control on the aggradation-incision behaviour of alluvial channels on Crete. During glacial stages, we attribute aggradation to hillslope sediment release promoted by reduced vegetation cover and decreased runoff; conversely, incision occurred during relatively warm and wet stages due to increased runoff. In this landscape, past hydroclimate variations outcompeted changes in sediment supply as the primary driver of alluvial deposition and incision.

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