Abstract
Abstract. High-relief great escarpments at passive margins present
a paradoxical combination of high-relief topography but low erosion rates
suggesting low rates of landscape change. However, vertical erosion rates do
not offer a straightforward metric of horizontal escarpment retreat rates,
so we attempt to address this problem in this paper. We show that detrital
cosmogenic nuclide concentrations can be interpreted as a
directionally dependent mass flux to characterize patterns of non-vertical
landscape evolution, e.g., an escarpment characterized by horizontal retreat.
We present two methods for converting cosmogenic nuclide concentrations into
escarpment retreat rates and calculate the retreat rates of escarpments with
published cosmogenic 10Be concentrations from the Western Ghats of
India. Escarpment retreat rates of the Western Ghats inferred from this
study vary within a range of hundreds to thousands of meters per Myr. We show that the
current position and morphology of the Western Ghats are consistent with an
escarpment retreating at a near-constant rate from the coastline since
rifting.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics
Cited by
17 articles.
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