Abstract
Abstract. Located at the transition between monsoon- and westerly-dominated climate systems, major rivers draining the western North Qilian
Shan incise deep, narrow canyons into latest Quaternary foreland basin
sediments of the Hexi Corridor. Field surveys and previously published
geochronology show that the Beida River incised 130 m at the mountain front
over the Late Pleistocene and Holocene at an average rate of 6 m kyr−1. We
hypothesize that a steep knickzone, with 3 % slope, initiated at the
mountain front and has since retreated to its present position, 10 km
upstream. Additional terrace dating suggests that this knickzone formed
around the mid-Holocene, over a duration of less than 1.5 kyr, during which
incision accelerated from 6 m kyr−1 to at least 25 m kyr−1. These incision rates
are much faster than the uplift rate across the North Qilian fault, which
suggests a climate-related increase in discharge drove rapid incision over
the Holocene and formation of the knickzone. Using the relationship between
incision rates and the amount of base level drop, we show the maximum
duration of knickzone formation to be ∼700 years and the minimum
incision rate to be 50 m kyr−1. We interpret that this period of increased
river incision corresponds to a pluvial lake-filling event at the terminus
of the Beida River and correlates with a wet period driven by strengthening
of the Southeast Asian Monsoon.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
National Science Foundation
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics
Cited by
4 articles.
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