Abstract

Abstract. The concept of topographic steady state has substantially informed our understanding of the relationships between landscapes, tectonics, climate, and lithology. In topographic steady state, erosion rates are equal everywhere, and steepness adjusts to enable equal erosion rates in rocks of different strengths. This conceptual model makes an implicit assumption of vertical contacts between different rock types. Here we hypothesize that landscapes in layered rocks will be driven toward a state of erosional continuity, where retreat rates on either side of a contact are equal in a direction parallel to the contact rather than in the vertical direction. For vertical contacts, erosional continuity is the same as topographic steady state, whereas for horizontal contacts it is equivalent to equal rates of horizontal retreat on either side of a rock contact. Using analytical solutions and numerical simulations, we show that erosional continuity predicts the form of flux steady-state landscapes that develop in simulations with horizontally layered rocks. For stream power erosion, the nature of continuity steady state depends on the exponent, n, in the erosion model. For n = 1, the landscape cannot maintain continuity. For cases where n ≠ 1, continuity is maintained, and steepness is a function of erodibility that is predicted by the theory. The landscape in continuity steady state can be quite different from that predicted by topographic steady state. For n < 1 continuity predicts that channels incising subhorizontal layers will be steeper in the weaker rock layers. For subhorizontal layered rocks with different erodibilities, continuity also predicts larger slope contrasts than in topographic steady state. Therefore, the relationship between steepness and erodibility within a sequence of layered rocks is a function of contact dip. For the subhorizontal limit, the history of layers exposed at base level also influences the steepness–erodibility relationship. If uplift rate is constant, continuity steady state is perturbed near base level, but these perturbations decay rapidly if there is a substantial contrast in erodibility. Though examples explored here utilize the stream power erosion model, continuity steady state provides a general mathematical tool that may also be useful to understand landscapes that develop by other erosion processes.

Highlights

  • The formation of landscapes is driven by tectonics and climate, and often profoundly influenced by lithology, the substrate on which tectonic and climate forces act to sculpt Earth’s surface

  • Topographic steady state has provided a powerful tool for understanding the response of landscapes to climate, tectonics, and lithology

  • Within layered rocks, topographic steady state is only attained in the case of vertical contacts

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Summary

Introduction

The formation of landscapes is driven by tectonics and climate, and often profoundly influenced by lithology, the substrate on which tectonic and climate forces act to sculpt Earth’s surface. Under steady climatic and tectonic forcing, channels are typically assumed to adjust toward topographic steady state (Hack, 1960; Howard, 1965; Willett and Brandon, 2002; Yanites and Tucker, 2010; Willett et al, 2014), where uplift and erosion are balanced and topography is constant with time This framework enables interpretation and comparison of stream profiles to identify spatial contrasts in uplift rates or transient responses to changes in tectonic or climatic forcing. We further examine how this steady state depends on the erosion model employed and on the contact dip angle, focusing on the case of subhorizontal layers

Erosional continuity and steady state
Continuity steady-state and stream profiles
Methods for one-dimensional simulations and analysis
Comparison of continuity steady-state and simulated profiles
Dynamics of base-level perturbations
Full landscape simulations
Discussion
Conclusions
Full Text
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