Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes

Mountainous regions and their forelands commonly support a suite of landforms sensitive to climate change and tectonics. Alluvial fans in particular, are prominent geomorphological features in arid and semiarid regions which provide record for landscape, climate, and tectonic evolution. We applied 1...

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Publicado: 2017
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Acceso en línea:https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano
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spelling paper:paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano2023-06-08T15:25:58Z Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes 10Be surface exposure dating Alluvial fans Climate change Glacial chronology Quaternary Southern central andes Arid regions Glacial geology Landforms Tectonics Alluvial fans Central Andes Glacial chronology Quaternary Surface exposure dating Climate change alluvial fan arid region climate change climate forcing dating method geomorphology landform marine isotope stage moraine mountain region neotectonics Quaternary reconstruction semiarid region tectonic evolution Andes Mountainous regions and their forelands commonly support a suite of landforms sensitive to climate change and tectonics. Alluvial fans in particular, are prominent geomorphological features in arid and semiarid regions which provide record for landscape, climate, and tectonic evolution. We applied 10Be surface exposure dating on moraines and associated fan terraces of the Ansilta range (31.6°S - 69.8°W) in the Southern Central Andes with the aim of comparing both chronologies and examining the nature of alluvial fan development. The alluvial fans yield minimum ages of 19 ± 1 (T1), 120 ± 9 (T2), 185 ± 9 (T3), 389 ± 22 (T4) and 768 ± 35 (T5) ka. Minimum ages derived from moraines are 18 ± 1 (M1), 27 ± 1 (M2), 279 ± 23 (M3) and 410 ± 28 (M4) ka. M1-T1 and M4-T4 seem to be geomorphic counterparts during MIS2 and MIS11-12. Combining our glacial and alluvial database with that available from other published studies, we recognized further glacial-alluvial counterparts. The distinct phases of alluvial fan aggradation mainly correlate with moraines or have a regional extension and fall into local cold and wet times, so that climate seems to be the main forcing of alluvial fan formation at our study site, even being a region with proofed neotectonic activity. We interpret the presence of at least six cold and humid periods of alluvial aggradation which correlate with global MIS 2, 3, 5d-e, 8, 12 and 18–20. Based on these results, alluvial fans may allow landscape and climate reconstructions back to ∼750 ka in our study region. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd 2017 https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic 10Be surface exposure dating
Alluvial fans
Climate change
Glacial chronology
Quaternary
Southern central andes
Arid regions
Glacial geology
Landforms
Tectonics
Alluvial fans
Central Andes
Glacial chronology
Quaternary
Surface exposure dating
Climate change
alluvial fan
arid region
climate change
climate forcing
dating method
geomorphology
landform
marine isotope stage
moraine
mountain region
neotectonics
Quaternary
reconstruction
semiarid region
tectonic evolution
Andes
spellingShingle 10Be surface exposure dating
Alluvial fans
Climate change
Glacial chronology
Quaternary
Southern central andes
Arid regions
Glacial geology
Landforms
Tectonics
Alluvial fans
Central Andes
Glacial chronology
Quaternary
Surface exposure dating
Climate change
alluvial fan
arid region
climate change
climate forcing
dating method
geomorphology
landform
marine isotope stage
moraine
mountain region
neotectonics
Quaternary
reconstruction
semiarid region
tectonic evolution
Andes
Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes
topic_facet 10Be surface exposure dating
Alluvial fans
Climate change
Glacial chronology
Quaternary
Southern central andes
Arid regions
Glacial geology
Landforms
Tectonics
Alluvial fans
Central Andes
Glacial chronology
Quaternary
Surface exposure dating
Climate change
alluvial fan
arid region
climate change
climate forcing
dating method
geomorphology
landform
marine isotope stage
moraine
mountain region
neotectonics
Quaternary
reconstruction
semiarid region
tectonic evolution
Andes
description Mountainous regions and their forelands commonly support a suite of landforms sensitive to climate change and tectonics. Alluvial fans in particular, are prominent geomorphological features in arid and semiarid regions which provide record for landscape, climate, and tectonic evolution. We applied 10Be surface exposure dating on moraines and associated fan terraces of the Ansilta range (31.6°S - 69.8°W) in the Southern Central Andes with the aim of comparing both chronologies and examining the nature of alluvial fan development. The alluvial fans yield minimum ages of 19 ± 1 (T1), 120 ± 9 (T2), 185 ± 9 (T3), 389 ± 22 (T4) and 768 ± 35 (T5) ka. Minimum ages derived from moraines are 18 ± 1 (M1), 27 ± 1 (M2), 279 ± 23 (M3) and 410 ± 28 (M4) ka. M1-T1 and M4-T4 seem to be geomorphic counterparts during MIS2 and MIS11-12. Combining our glacial and alluvial database with that available from other published studies, we recognized further glacial-alluvial counterparts. The distinct phases of alluvial fan aggradation mainly correlate with moraines or have a regional extension and fall into local cold and wet times, so that climate seems to be the main forcing of alluvial fan formation at our study site, even being a region with proofed neotectonic activity. We interpret the presence of at least six cold and humid periods of alluvial aggradation which correlate with global MIS 2, 3, 5d-e, 8, 12 and 18–20. Based on these results, alluvial fans may allow landscape and climate reconstructions back to ∼750 ka in our study region. © 2017 Elsevier Ltd
title Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes
title_short Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes
title_full Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes
title_fullStr Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes
title_full_unstemmed Climatic and Tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the Southern Central Andes
title_sort climatic and tectonic forcing on alluvial fans in the southern central andes
publishDate 2017
url https://bibliotecadigital.exactas.uba.ar/collection/paper/document/paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_02773791_v172_n_p131_Terrizzano
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