4.4 Article

Autogenic versus allogenic controls on the evolution of a coupled fluvial megafan-mountainous catchment system: numerical modelling and comparison with the Lannemezan megafan system (northern Pyrenees, France)

Journal

EARTH SURFACE DYNAMICS
Volume 5, Issue 1, Pages 125-143

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/esurf-5-125-2017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. French National Research Agency ANR (Project PYRAMID) [ANR-11-BS56-0031]
  2. French Ministry of Higher Education (MESR)
  3. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-11-BS56-0031] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

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Alluvial megafans are sensitive recorders of landscape evolution, controlled by both autogenic processes and allogenic forcing, and they are influenced by the coupled dynamics of the fan with its mountainous catchment. The Lannemezan megafan in the northern Pyrenean foreland was abandoned by its mountainous feeder stream during the Quaternary and subsequently incised, leaving a flight of alluvial terraces along the stream network. We use numerical models to explore the relative roles of autogenic processes and external forcing in the building, abandonment and incision of a foreland megafan, and we compare the results with the inferred evolution of the Lannemezan megafan. Autogenic processes are sufficient to explain the building of a megafan and the long-term entrenchment of its feeding river on time and space scales that match the Lannemezan setting. Climate, through temporal variations in precipitation rate, may have played a role in the episodic pattern of incision on a shorter timescale. In contrast, base-level changes, tectonic activity in the mountain range or tilting of the foreland through flexural isostatic rebound do not appear to have played a role in the abandonment of the megafan.

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