Abstract

Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide concentrations of detrital minerals yield catchment-wide rates at which hillslopes erode. These estimates are commonly used to infer millennial scale denudation patterns and to identify the main controls on mass-balance and landscape evolution at orogenic scale. The same approach can be applied to minerals preserved in stratigraphic records of rivers, although extracting reliable paleo-denudation rates from Ma-old archives can be limited by the target nuclide’s half-life and by exposure to cosmic radiations after deposition. Slowly eroding landscapes, however, are characterized by the highest cosmogenic radionuclide concentrations; a condition that potentially allows pushing the method’s limits further back in time, provided that independent constraints on the geological evolution are available. Here, we report 13–10 million-year-old paleo-denudation rates from northernmost Chile, the oldest 10Be-inferred rates ever reported. We find that at 13–10 Ma the western Andean Altiplano has been eroding at 1–10 m/Ma, consistent with modern paces in the same setting, and it experienced a period with rates above 10 m/Ma at ~11 Ma. We suggest that the background tectono-geomorphic state of the western margin of the Altiplano has remained stable since the mid-Miocene, whereas intensified runoff since ~11 Ma might explain the transient increase in denudation.

Details

Title
10Be-inferred paleo-denudation rates imply that the mid-Miocene western central Andes eroded as slowly as today
Author
Madella, Andrea 1   VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Delunel, Romain 2 ; Akçar, Naki 2 ; Schlunegger, Fritz 2 ; Marcus Christl 3   VIAFID ORCID Logo 

 Institute of Geological Sciences, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland; Department of Geosciences, University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany 
 Institute of Geological Sciences, University of Bern, Bern, Switzerland 
 Laboratory for Ion Beam Physics, ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland 
Pages
1-9
Publication year
2018
Publication date
Feb 2018
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20452322
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1993598711
Copyright
© 2018. This work is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.