Abstract

Abstract In this paper, we discriminate the contribution of the different sediment sources into a river situated in the semiarid region of northern Chile, differentiating the ones driven by the paraglacial response from the ones yielded to the tributary-junction alluvial fans or the ones coming from the hillslopes. The sedimentary infilling is accurately described in the main landforms such as alluvial fans, alluvial terraces and landslides in the current valley floor where twenty-six 14C AMS samples were picked up. The 14C age data indicate that the aggradation in the uppermost part of the valley immediately postdates the glacial retreat at ∼15,000 14C years cal. B.P. and spans the whole Holocene starting at 11 ka. B.P. and finishing about 2 ka B.P. The main sources for lateral inputs are debris flows from tributary catchments in the portion where the river is embedded in between 1000 and 2000 m a.s.l as well as catastrophic landslides. Additionally, an extensive detailed geomorphological mapping is provided to discuss the meaning of the ages together with an assessment of where the samples came from. Finally, the dataset and field criteria provided in this work contribute to better perform paleoclimatological interpretations for the semiarid fluvial systems of northern Chile. These interpretations usually consider the increased influence of the westerlies during the Holocene and the span of time that the paraglacial response delivers glacigenic sediments into the system.

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