Abstract

Compilation of empirical data on river-terrace sequences from across Eurasia during successive International Geoscience Programme (IGCP) projects revealed marked contrasts between the records from different crustal provinces, notably between the East European Platform (EEP) and the Caledonian/Variscan/Alpine provinces of western/central Europe. Well-developed terrace staircases, often indicative of hundreds of metres of Late Cenozoic uplift/fluvial incision, are preserved in many parts of the European continent, especially westward of the EEP. In contrast, rivers within the EEP have extensive sedimentary archives that are not preserved as terrace staircases; instead, they form sets of laterally accreted sediment packages, never more than a few tens of metres above or below modern river level. There are parallels in Asia, albeit that the crust of the Asian continent has a greater proportion of tectonically active zones, at one extreme, and stable platforms/cratons at the other. The observed patterns point strongly to the mobility of lower-crustal material within younger provinces, where the continental crust is significantly hotter, as a key part of the mechanism driving the progressive uplift that has led to valley incision and the formation of river terraces: a process of erosional isostasy with lower-crustal flow as a positive-feedback driver. The contrast between these different styles of fluvial-archive preservation is of considerable significance for Quaternary stratigraphy, as such archives provide important templates for the understanding of the terrestrial record.

Highlights

  • This review highlights the enhancement of terrestrial Quaternary stratigraphy that has been made possible by the widespread evaluation of fluvial sequences, achieved as a result of successiveInternational Geoscience Programme (IGCP) projects (449, 518: see acknowledgements) and the continuation of this work under the auspices of the Fluvial Archives Group (FLAG)

  • The different styles of fluvial archive preservation in the different parts of the Eurasian continent are an important consideration in the understanding of Quaternary stratigraphy in these regions, given that fluvial sequences provide valuable templates for the Late Cenozoic terrestrial record [5,8,27]

  • Especially in Europe, it is clear that the different preservational patterns of fluvial archives are related to crustal type, with progressive and extensive vertical incision being evidenced from fluvial sequences in regions of relatively ‘young’ dynamic crust, whereas older crust generally has greater stability and has seen much less valley deepening by rivers, if any at all

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Summary

Introduction

This review highlights the enhancement of terrestrial Quaternary stratigraphy that has been made possible by the widespread evaluation of fluvial sequences, achieved as a result of successive. The formation of Quaternary fluvial terrace staircases has been associated with ‘epeirogenic’ vertical crustal motions within continental interiors [3,4,6,7,16,26,27,28,29]. Such uplifting areas occur worldwide, but not everywhere. There are smaller fault-bounded basins within the upstream parts of Rhine Graben that have been subsiding relative to adjacent terraced valley reaches, such as the Neuwied Basin [35,36]; small structural basins of this sort have generally been omitted from Figure 1

Example Eurasian Records from Areas of Dynamic Crust
Idealized transverse section through the terrace sequence of the Lower Thames
Anomalous Records from Orogenic Belts in Central Asia
The Effects of Glaciation
Discussion
Conclusions
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