Lithospheric Flexure Controls on Geomorphology, Hydrology, and River Chemistry in the Andean Foreland Basin

Author:

Repasch Marisa1ORCID,Scheingross Joel S.2ORCID,Cook Kristen L.3,Sachse Dirk4ORCID,Dosch Sophia45,Orfeo Oscar6ORCID,Hovius Niels45ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA

2. Department of Geological Sciences and Engineering University of Nevada Reno Reno NV USA

3. IRD ISTerre Université Grenoble Alpes Grenoble France

4. GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Potsdam Germany

5. Institute of Geosciences Universität Potsdam Potsdam Germany

6. Centro de Ecología Aplicada del Litoral (CECOAL) CONICET Corrientes Argentina

Abstract

AbstractTectonics exerts a strong control over the morphology of Earth's surface that is apparent in active mountain belts. In lowland areas, subtle processes like lithospheric flexure and isostatic rebound can impact Earth surface dynamics, hydrologic connectivity, and topography, suggesting that geomorphic and hydrologic analyses can shed light on underlying lithospheric properties. Here we examine the effect of lithospheric flexure on the geomorphology, hydrology, and river water chemistry of the Rio Bermejo fluvial system in the east Andean foreland basin of northern Argentina. Results show that proximal to the mountain front, foredeep basin subsidence causes sedimentation along a braided channel belt that is superelevated relative to the surrounding flood basin. During floods, water flows from the superelevated channel into the groundwater reservoir, causing a net loss of discharge with distance downstream. Further downstream, forebulge uplift forces channel narrowing, high lateral migration rates, and incision up to 13 m into older river deposits. This incision locally allows groundwater flow into the river, causing a ∼20% increase in river solute load. Groundwater emerges from the forebulge into the backbulge, predominantly as spring‐fed channels. Here, channel migration rates decrease, suggesting a switch from net uplift to subsidence that reduces the depth to the groundwater table. This analysis shows that subtle lithospheric flexure can have significant effects on river channel morphology that determine hydrologic flow paths, and ultimately influence geochemical and ecological patterns. We suggest that these effects may elucidate lithospheric properties that are otherwise inferred from bulk geophysical observations.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences

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