Literature DB >> 26598689

Mid-Pleistocene climate transition drives net mass loss from rapidly uplifting St. Elias Mountains, Alaska.

Sean P S Gulick1, John M Jaeger2, Alan C Mix3, Hirofumi Asahi4, Heinrich Bahlburg5, Christina L Belanger6, Glaucia B B Berbel7, Laurel Childress8, Ellen Cowan9, Laureen Drab10, Matthias Forwick11, Akemi Fukumura12, Shulan Ge13, Shyam Gupta14, Arata Kioka15, Susumu Konno16, Leah J LeVay17, Christian März18, Kenji M Matsuzaki19, Erin L McClymont20, Chris Moy21, Juliane Müller22, Atsunori Nakamura15, Takanori Ojima15, Fabiana R Ribeiro7, Kenneth D Ridgway23, Oscar E Romero24, Angela L Slagle10, Joseph S Stoner3, Guillaume St-Onge25, Itsuki Suto12, Maureen D Walczak26, Lindsay L Worthington27, Ian Bailey28, Eva Enkelmann29, Robert Reece30, John M Swartz31.   

Abstract

Erosion, sediment production, and routing on a tectonically active continental margin reflect both tectonic and climatic processes; partitioning the relative importance of these processes remains controversial. Gulf of Alaska contains a preserved sedimentary record of the Yakutat Terrane collision with North America. Because tectonic convergence in the coastal St. Elias orogen has been roughly constant for 6 My, variations in its eroded sediments preserved in the offshore Surveyor Fan constrain a budget of tectonic material influx, erosion, and sediment output. Seismically imaged sediment volumes calibrated with chronologies derived from Integrated Ocean Drilling Program boreholes show that erosion accelerated in response to Northern Hemisphere glacial intensification (∼ 2.7 Ma) and that the 900-km-long Surveyor Channel inception appears to correlate with this event. However, tectonic influx exceeded integrated sediment efflux over the interval 2.8-1.2 Ma. Volumetric erosion accelerated following the onset of quasi-periodic (∼ 100-ky) glacial cycles in the mid-Pleistocene climate transition (1.2-0.7 Ma). Since then, erosion and transport of material out of the orogen has outpaced tectonic influx by 50-80%. Such a rapid net mass loss explains apparent increases in exhumation rates inferred onshore from exposure dates and mapped out-of-sequence fault patterns. The 1.2-My mass budget imbalance must relax back toward equilibrium in balance with tectonic influx over the timescale of orogenic wedge response (millions of years). The St. Elias Range provides a key example of how active orogenic systems respond to transient mass fluxes, and of the possible influence of climate-driven erosive processes that diverge from equilibrium on the million-year scale.

Keywords:  Mid-Pleistocene transition; mass flux; ocean drilling; orogenesis; tectonic−climate interactions

Year:  2015        PMID: 26598689      PMCID: PMC4679047          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1512549112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  4 in total

1.  Increased sedimentation rates and grain sizes 2-4 Myr ago due to the influence of climate change on erosion rates.

Authors:  Z Peizhen; P Molnar; W R Downs
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2001-04-19       Impact factor: 49.962

2.  Himalayan tectonics explained by extrusion of a low-viscosity crustal channel coupled to focused surface denudation.

Authors:  C Beaumont; R A Jamieson; M H Nguyen; B Lee
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2001-12-13       Impact factor: 49.962

3.  Observed latitudinal variations in erosion as a function of glacier dynamics.

Authors:  Michéle Koppes; Bernard Hallet; Eric Rignot; Jérémie Mouginot; Julia Smith Wellner; Katherine Boldt
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2015-10-01       Impact factor: 49.962

4.  Glaciations in response to climate variations preconditioned by evolving topography.

Authors:  Vivi Kathrine Pedersen; David Lundbek Egholm
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 49.962

  4 in total
  5 in total

1.  Ice sheets as a missing source of silica to the polar oceans.

Authors:  Jon R Hawkings; Jemma L Wadham; Liane G Benning; Katharine R Hendry; Martyn Tranter; Andrew Tedstone; Peter Nienow; Rob Raiswell
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2017-01-25       Impact factor: 14.919

2.  Comment (2) on "Formation of the Isthmus of Panama" by O'Dea et al.

Authors:  Peter Molnar
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2017-06-14       Impact factor: 14.136

3.  Ice core evidence for atmospheric oxygen decline since the Mid-Pleistocene transition.

Authors:  Yuzhen Yan; Edward J Brook; Andrei V Kurbatov; Jeffrey P Severinghaus; John A Higgins
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2021-12-15       Impact factor: 14.136

4.  A modern pulse of ultrafast exhumation and diachronous crustal melting in the Nanga Parbat Massif.

Authors:  Victor E Guevara; Andrew J Smye; Mark J Caddick; Michael P Searle; Telemak Olsen; Lisa Whalen; Andrew R C Kylander-Clark; Michael J Jercinovic; David J Waters
Journal:  Sci Adv       Date:  2022-08-05       Impact factor: 14.957

5.  Episodes of Early Pleistocene West Antarctic Ice Sheet Retreat Recorded by Iceberg Alley Sediments.

Authors:  Ian Bailey; Sidney Hemming; Brendan T Reilly; Gavyn Rollinson; Trevor Williams; Michael E Weber; Maureen E Raymo; Victoria L Peck; Thomas A Ronge; Stefanie Brachfeld; Suzanne O'Connell; Lisa Tauxe; Jonathan P Warnock; Linda Armbrecht; Fabricio G Cardillo; Zhiheng Du; Gerson Fauth; Marga Garcia; Anna Glueder; Michelle Guitard; Marcus Gutjahr; Iván Hernández-Almeida; Frida S Hoem; Ji-Hwan Hwang; Mutsumi Iizuka; Yuji Kato; Bridget Kenlee; Yasmina M Martos; Lara F Pérez; Osamu Seki; Shubham Tripathi; Xufeng Zheng
Journal:  Paleoceanogr Paleoclimatol       Date:  2022-07-12
  5 in total

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