Logo Repositorio Institucional

Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: https://dspace.ucuenca.edu.ec/handle/123456789/22012
Título : Transient river response, captured by channel steepness and its concavity
Otros títulos : Geomorphology
Autor: Vanacker, Veerle
Blanckenburg, F. von
Govers, Gerard
Molina, Armando
Campforts, B.
Kubik, P. W.
Palabras clave : Landscape Transience
River Longitudinal Profiles
Be-Derived Denudation Rates
Erosion Control
Tropical Andes
Ecuador
Fecha de publicación : 1-ene-2015
Paginación: Páginas 234-243
Numero / Secuencia : 
volumen 228
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2014.09.013
Ciudad: 
Cuenca
Tipo: Article
Abstract: 
Mountain rivers draining tropical regions are known to be great conveyor belts carrying efficiently more than half of the global sediment flux to the oceans. Many tropical mountain areas are located in tectonically active belts where the hillslope and stream channel morphology are rapidly evolving in response to changes in base level. Here, we report basin-wide denudation rates for an east–west transect through the tropical Andes. Hillslope and channel morphology vary systematically from east to west, reflecting the transition from high relief, strongly dissected topography in the escarpment zones into relatively low relief topography in the inter-Andean valley. The spatial pattern of differential denudation rates reflects the transient adjustment of the landscape to rapid river incision following tectonic uplift and river diversion. In the inter-Andean valley, upstream of the wave of incision, slopes and river channels display a relatively smooth, concave-up morphology and denudation rates (time scale of 104–105 a) are consistently low (3 to 200 mm/ka). In contrast, slopes and river channels of rejuvenated basins draining the eastern cordillera are steep to very steep; and the studied drainage basins show a wide range of denudation rate values (60 to 400 mm/ka) that increase systematically with increasing basin mean slope gradient, channel steepness, and channel convexity. Drainage basins that are characterised by strong convexities in their river longitudinal profiles systematically have higher denudation rates. As such, this is one of the first studies that provides field-based evidence of a correlation between channel concavity and basin mean denudation rates, consistent with process-based fluvial incision models.
URI : http://dspace.ucuenca.edu.ec/handle/123456789/22012
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos

Ficheros en este ítem:
Fichero Descripción Tamaño Formato  
scopu 11.pdfdirección10.45 kBAdobe PDFVista previa
Visualizar/Abrir


Este ítem está protegido por copyright original



Este ítem está sujeto a una licencia Creative Commons Licencia Creative Commons Creative Commons

 

Centro de Documentacion Regional "Juan Bautista Vázquez"

Biblioteca Campus Central Biblioteca Campus Salud Biblioteca Campus Yanuncay
Av. 12 de Abril y Calle Agustín Cueva, Telf: 4051000 Ext. 1311, 1312, 1313, 1314. Horario de atención: Lunes-Viernes: 07H00-21H00. Sábados: 08H00-12H00 Av. El Paraíso 3-52, detrás del Hospital Regional "Vicente Corral Moscoso", Telf: 4051000 Ext. 3144. Horario de atención: Lunes-Viernes: 07H00-19H00 Av. 12 de Octubre y Diego de Tapia, antiguo Colegio Orientalista, Telf: 4051000 Ext. 3535 2810706 Ext. 116. Horario de atención: Lunes-Viernes: 07H30-19H00