Abstract

Abstract. One of the main purposes of detrital thermochronology is to provide constraints on the regional-scale exhumation rate and its spatial variability in actively eroding mountain ranges. Procedures that use cooling age distributions coupled with hypsometry and thermal models have been developed in order to extract quantitative estimates of erosion rate and its spatial distribution, assuming steady state between tectonic uplift and erosion. This hypothesis precludes the use of these procedures to assess the likely transient response of mountain belts to changes in tectonic or climatic forcing. Other methods are based on an a priori knowledge of the in situ distribution of ages to interpret the detrital age distributions. In this paper, we describe a simple method that, using the observed detrital mineral age distributions collected along a river, allows us to extract information about the relative distribution of erosion rates in an eroding catchment without relying on a steady-state assumption, the value of thermal parameters or an a priori knowledge of in situ age distributions. The model is based on a relatively low number of parameters describing lithological variability among the various sub-catchments and their sizes and only uses the raw ages. The method we propose is tested against synthetic age distributions to demonstrate its accuracy and the optimum conditions for it use. In order to illustrate the method, we invert age distributions collected along the main trunk of the Tsangpo–Siang–Brahmaputra river system in the eastern Himalaya. From the inversion of the cooling age distributions we predict present-day erosion rates of the catchments along the Tsangpo–Siang–Brahmaputra river system, as well as some of its tributaries. We show that detrital age distributions contain dual information about present-day erosion rate, i.e., from the predicted distribution of surface ages within each catchment and from the relative contribution of any given catchment to the river distribution. The method additionally allows comparing modern erosion rates to long-term exhumation rates. We provide a simple implementation of the method in Python code within a Jupyter Notebook that includes the data used in this paper for illustration purposes.

Highlights

  • Thermochronometric methods provide us with information pertaining to the cooling history of a rock

  • Procedures that use cooling age distributions coupled with hypsometry and thermal models have been developed in order to extract quantitative estimates of erosion rate and its spatial distribution, assuming steady state between tectonic uplift and erosion

  • Maximum erosion rates are observed in catchment C, which is closest to the eastern Himalayan syntaxis

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Summary

Introduction

Thermochronometric methods provide us with information pertaining to the cooling history of a rock. Besides collecting in situ data, one can collect and date a large number of mineral grains from a sand sample collected at a given location in a river draining an actively eroding area Such detrital thermochronology datasets provide a proxy for the distribution of surface rock ages in a given catchment (Bernet et al, 2004; Brandon, 1992). McPhillips and Brandon (2010) used detrital cooling ages combined with in situ age measurements to infer a recent increase in relief in the Sierra Nevada, California All of these methods rely on a priori knowledge or hypotheses concerning the age distributions in the catchments drained by the river from which the samples have been collected.

Basic assumptions
Downstream bin summation along main trunk
Incremental formulation
Estimating erosion rates
Using age distributions from tributaries
Uncertainty estimates by bootstrapping
Assessing the method on synthetic distributions
Applications to a detrital age dataset
Mineral concentration factors and their uncertainty
Ways in which the method could be improved
Conclusions
Full Text
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