Spatial and temporal variations in denudation of the Wasatch Mountains, Utah, USA
Author(s) -
Greg M. Stock,
Kurt L. Frankel,
Todd A. Ehlers,
Mirjam Schaller,
S. M. Briggs,
Robert C. Finkel
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
lithosphere
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.737
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1941-8264
pISSN - 1947-4253
DOI - 10.1130/l15.1
Subject(s) - denudation , geology , spatial variability , drainage basin , geomorphology , range (aeronautics) , pleistocene , mountain range (options) , magnitude (astronomy) , tectonics , physical geography , paleontology , geography , statistics , materials science , physics , mathematics , cartography , astronomy , financial economics , economics , composite material
We evaluate spatial and temporal variations in denudation of the north-central Wasatch Mountains, Utah, by determining catchment-wide denudation rates with 10 Be concentrations in alluvial sediment and comparing these rates with previously published data on rock uplift and exhumation of the range. Catchments draining the range front show relatively little variation in denudation rate (0.07–0.17 mm/yr), while steeper (mean hillslope gradient >30°) catchments in the core of the range show larger variation (0.17–0.79 mm/yr). We attribute the larger spatial variation in catchment-wide denudation in the core of the range to landsliding of hillslopes at threshold gradients; faster denudation in this region may signify landscape adjustment to late Pleistocene glaciations. The mean denudation rate for all catchments (0.2 mm/yr) is generally consistent with longer-term exhumation rates derived from thermochronometers and with shorter-term vertical fault displacement rates, suggesting that denudation of the north-central Wasatch has been roughly steady, or decreasing slightly, over the past 5 m.y. Although 10 Be-based catchment-wide denudation rates are sensitive to localized geomorphic processes and events, overall, they appear to refl ect the larger tectonic forces that have driven denudation of the Wasatch Mountains over longer time scales.
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