4.4 Article

Growing topography due to contrasting rock types in a tectonically dead landscape

Journal

EARTH SURFACE DYNAMICS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 167-181

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/esurf-9-167-2021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NERC under CIAF award [9177.0417]
  2. CAPES under a Science without Borders fellowship [BEX 12000/13-2]
  3. CAPES-PrInt Postdoctoral fellowship [88887.367976/2019-00]
  4. [DEM_GEOL1345]

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This study reveals that in a humid subtropical, high-relief post-orogenic landscape in Brazil, denudation rates are negatively correlated with topographic relief, channel steepness, and modern precipitation rates. Resistant rocks denude more slowly than more erodible rock units, and the efficiency of fluvial erosion varies primarily due to these bedrock differences. Variations in erodibility continue to drive contrasts in rates of denudation in a tectonically inactive landscape evolving for hundreds of millions of years.
Many mountain ranges survive in a phase of erosional decay for millions of years following the cessation of tectonic activity. Landscape dynamics in these post-orogenic settings have long puzzled geologists due to the expectation that topographic relief should decline with time. Our understanding of how denudation rates, crustal dynamics, bedrock erodibility, climate, and mantle-driven processes interact to dictate the persistence of relief in the absence of ongoing tectonics is incomplete. Here we explore how lateral variations in rock type, ranging from resistant quartzites to less resistant schists and phyllites, and up to the least resistant gneisses and granitic rocks, have affected rates and patterns of denudation and topographic forms in a humid subtropical, high-relief post-orogenic landscape in Brazil where active tectonics ended hundreds of millions of years ago. We show that catchment-averaged denudation rates are negatively correlated with mean values of topographic relief, channel steepness and modern precipitation rates. Denudation instead correlates with inferred bedrock strength, with resistant rocks denuding more slowly relative to more erodible rock units, and the efficiency of fluvial erosion varies primarily due to these bedrock differences. Variations in erodibility continue to drive contrasts in rates of denudation in a tectonically inactive landscape evolving for hundreds of millions of years, suggesting that equilibrium is not a natural attractor state and that relief continues to grow through time. Over the long timescales of post-orogenic development, exposure at the surface of rock types with differential erodibility can become a dominant control on landscape dynamics by producing spatial variations in geomorphic processes and rates, promoting the survival of relief and determining spatial differences in erosional response timescales long after cessation of mountain building.

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