Abstract
Abstract. Information about past climate, tectonics, and landscape
evolution is often obtained by dating geomorphic surfaces comprising
deposited or aggraded material, e.g. fluvial fill terraces, alluvial fans,
volcanic flows, or glacial till. Although surface ages can provide valuable
information about these landforms, they can only constrain the period of
active deposition of surface material, which may span a significant period
of time in the case of alluvial landforms. In contrast, surface abandonment
often occurs abruptly and coincides with important events like drainage
reorganization, climate change, or landscape uplift. However, abandonment
cannot be directly dated because it represents a cessation in the deposition
of dateable material. In this study, we present a new approach to inferring
when a surface was likely abandoned using exposure ages derived from in situ-produced cosmogenic nuclides. We use artificial data to measure the
discrepancy between the youngest age randomly obtained from a surface and
the true timing of surface abandonment. Our analyses simulate surface dating
scenarios with variable durations of surface formation and variable numbers
of exposure ages from sampled boulders. From our artificial data, we derive
a set of probabilistic equations and a MATLAB tool that can be applied to a
set of real sampled surface ages to estimate the probable period of time
within which abandonment is likely to have occurred. Our new approach to
constraining surface abandonment has applications for geomorphological
studies that relate surface ages to tectonic deformation, past climate, or
the rates of surface processes.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics
Cited by
14 articles.
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