Browsing by Author "Struck, M"
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- ItemErosion and the sediment conveyor in central Australia(Geological Society of Australia, 2016-02-29) Jansen, JD; Chappell, J; Struck, M; Eccleshall, SV; Fujioka, T; Codilean, AT; Fülöp, RH; Fink, D; Cohen, TJ; Nanson, GCWhy are the Neogene sedimentary fills across central Australia generally thin and discontinuous? One long-standing explanation is that sluggish tectonism and intensified aridity have combined to suppress rates of erosion and sediment production yielding a landscape crowded with inherited, preMiocene forms. Quantifying rates of sediment production, residence time and transport is possible with numerous methods, but the recent growth of cosmogenic nuclide (CN) analysis has provided unprecedented quantitative insights to rates of landscape evolution. Measurements of in situ produced cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al integrate rates of surface processes over million-year timescales—the last part of the Neogene in which aridity has strengthened across the continental interior. We present a compilation of ~600 published and unpublished 10Be and 26Al measurements from central Australia with a focus on the Neogene Eyre Basin and its periphery. Outlying and inlying bedrock uplands serve as engines of sediment production via erosion of bedrock. Surrounding the bedrock outcrops are vast sediment conveyors of varying efficiency and tempo: hillslopes, pediments, and alluvial fans are interim storage/burial zones for sediment in transit to the network of low-gradient rivers, dunes, and playas towards base level. Interactions between fluvial and aeolian processes are especially pertinent to sediment flux in the Eyre Basin. Major rivers such as the Cooper and Finke traverse dunefields in their lower reaches where quantities of alluvia are recirculated into dunes and vice versa. Tracking the trajectories of sediment from source-to-sink (including aeolian recirculation) remains a major challenge, but is central to unravelling the sedimentary dynamics of central Australia's Neogene basins. Based on the CN compilation we estimate 1) spatially averaged erosion rates at the scale of a hillslope or river catchment; 2) pointbased erosion rates on bedrock surfaces; 3) residence time of sediment in hillslope regolith and alluvial fans; and 4) cumulative burial history of sediments in transit. Catchment-scale erosion rates (n~100) are consistently low (<10 m/Myr) and include some of the lowest rates ever measured (~0.3 m/Myr); however, a small group of catchments in the Flinders Ras yield higher erosion rates (~30–60 m/Myr). Bedrock hillslopes (n~200) tend to erode even slower (<5 m/Myr), with a subset of Flinders Ras sites again being the exception (~10–30 m/Myr) and suggesting the influence of recent tectonism. Several CN depth-profiles measured on hillslopes and alluvial fans indicate sediment residence times >0.5 Myr, and high-resolution sampling along three hillslopes with differing morphology (linear, convex, and concave) reveals major variations in sediment production and transport rates that hint at the long-term evolution. In the rivers, fluvial sediments show a weak tendency to increase cumulative burial history downstream (1–2 Myr), consistent with the expanding accommodation space for storage and burial. Dune sediments sampled in the Simpson and Tirari dunefields (n~16) contain cumulative burial histories (up to 1.5 Myr) similar to that of the intersecting rivers. This points to an intimate mix of fluvial and aeolian processes in areas approaching base level. Curiously, these sediments occur in the lowest part of the continent and contain the longest histories of cumulative burial, yet do not form part of the thickest sedimentary fills in the Eyre Basin.
- ItemGeomorphic imprint of dynamic topography and intraplate tectonism in central Australia(Copernicus GmbH, 2020-05-04) Jansen, JD; Sandiford, M; Fujioka, T; Cohen, TJ; Struck, M; Anderson, SP; Anderson, RS; Egholm, DLThe mantle convection accompanying plate motion causes vertical movements of up to a few hundred metres at Earth’s surface over wavelengths of 102–103 km. This dynamic topography appears to come and go at ~ 1–10 Myr timescales in areas that are often well away from plate margins, although its spatial and temporal characteristics are subject to ongoing debate. Since such motions are small and transient, discriminating convective signals from other drivers of relief generation and/or sediment dispersal remains tricky. An outstanding challenge is to detect these elusive, transient undulations from a tell-tale geomorphic imprint preserved in either drainage patterns or the stratigraphic record. In the intra-plate setting of central Australia, a 30 km long sinuous gorge is developed where the major regional drainage, Finke River, dissects a band of low hills. Remarkably, this gorge is intertwined with an abandoned and less deeply incised gorge that forms hanging junctions and shares similar width and sinuosity. This unusual overprinting of the two gorges remains unexplained. With an aim to investigate the history of the intertwined gorges, we measured cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al in fluvial gravels stored in the palaeovalley cutoffs. The gravels are remnants of major alluviation episodes that we surmise result from ongoing vertical motions associated with dynamic topography. We use a Markov chain Monte Carlo-based inversion model to test two hypotheses to explain the nuclide inventory contained within the stored fluvial gravels. In the first case, rapid alluviation and erosion since 1 Ma preserves the nuclide memory of the source area; in the second, the nuclide memory is erased during long-term fluvial storage (> 5 Myr) and is restored during exhumation of the palaeovalley gravel-pile. The two hypotheses are therefore limiting-case scenarios that constrain overall fast versus slow landscape evolution, respectively. Our model results suggest that long-term burial decouples the source-area signal from nuclide abundances measured in the palaeovalley gravels. This casts events into a Miocene timescale. © Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Licence.
- ItemSediment transport dynamics in central Australian low-gradient landscapes quantified with cosmogenic nuclides(Science Council of Japan, 2015-07-26) Struck, M; Jansen, JD; Codilean, AT; Fujioka, T; Fink, D; Kotevski, SErosion and sediment routing are key to understanding landscape evolution. In this regard, low-gradient landscapes have remained effectively unstudied in spite of their vast global extent, whereas steep mountain regions have been the focus of most research efforts. Sediment transport and storage is widely thought to occur on much longer timescales in regions of low relief relative to their steep counterparts. Here we apply in situ-produced cosmogenic nuclides to examine the sediment transport and storage history of a low-gradient catchment (Peake River) in arid central Australia. The catchment covers 27,300 km2 with a total relief of 394 m and a mean slope of 32 ± 29 m/km (mean ± 1σ, calculated from 1 arc-sec SRTM). Previous studies in central Australia have focused mainly upon local measurements of landscape lowering and bedrock erosion; however, to better understand the processes shaping these landscapes, we adopt a source-to-sink approach coupling bedrock and hillslope colluvium measurements of cosmogenic nuclides with basin-wide measurements in fluvial sediment. Variation in concentrations and ratios of 10Be and 26Al in sediment provides insights to residence times and burial history as grains are transmitted through the bedrock-hillslope-stream sediment conveyor. Our preliminary results reveal basin-wide erosion rates ranging from 0.2 to 5.8 m/Myr (weighted mean = 0.41 ± 0.03 m/Myr), which are among the lowest rates ever measured. We discuss the sediment dynamics of flat landscapes, emphasizing the contrast with steeper settings. Copyright © 2015, XIX INQUA Congress LOC
- ItemSoil production and transport on postorogenic desert hillslopes quantified with 10Be and 26Al(GeoScienceWorld, 2018-01-02) Struck, M; Jansen, JD; Fujioka, T; Codilean, AT; Fink, D; Egholm, DL; Fülöp, RH; Wilcken, KM; Kotevski, SHillslopes stand at the top of the geomorphic conveyor belt that produces and transports mass throughout landscapes. Quantification of the tempo of hillslope evolution is key to identifying primary sediment production and understanding how surface processes shape topography. We measured cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al on three desert hillslopes in postorogenic central Australia and quantified their soil dynamics and evolution. We found that hillslope morphology is governed by lithological factors, and differing nuclide abundances reflect the main sediment transport processes. Slope wash is widespread, and shrink-swell soil processes drive downslope creep and upward migration of gravels detached from underlying bedrock. We applied Monte Carlo–based inversion modeling to reconstruct soil production and the exhumation histories of stony mantle gravels. Underlying silty soils derive from eolian dust inputs dating to at least 0.2 Ma and possibly more than 1 Ma, in line with intensified aridity. Exposed bedrock erodes at ∼0.2–7 m/m.y., and under soil, it erodes at maximum rates of <0.1 m/m.y. up to 10 m/m.y. Accordingly, particles spend 2–6 m.y. or more in the upper 0.6 m of the bedrock column and an additional ∼0.2–2 m.y. or more within hillslope soils. Such long periods near the surface result in surface particles acquiring inherently low 26Al/10Be ratios. Bedrock erodibility underpins regional variations in erosion rate, and the slow tempo of hillslope evolution is largely independent of base level. This suggests a distinctive top-down evolution among postorogenic hillslopes set by authigenic rates of sediment production, rather than by fluvial incision as in tectonically active settings. © 2021 Geological Society of America
- ItemTracking the 10Be–26AI source-area signal in sediment-routing systems of arid central Australia(European Geosciences Union, 2018-05-07) Struck, M; Jansen, JD; Fujioka, T; Codilean, AT; Fink, D; Fülöp, RH; Wilcken, KM; Price, DM; Kotevski, S; Fifield, LK; Chappell, JSediment-routing systems continuously transfer information and mass from eroding source areas to depositional sinks. Understanding how these systems alter environmental signals is critical when it comes to inferring source-area properties from the sedimentary record. We measure cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al along three large sediment-routing systems (∼ 100 000 km2) in central Australia with the aim of tracking downstream variations in 10Be–26Al inventories and identifying the factors responsible for these variations. By comparing 56 new cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al measurements in stream sediments with matching data (n= 55) from source areas, we show that 10Be–26Al inventories in hillslope bedrock and soils set the benchmark for relative downstream modifications. Lithology is the primary determinant of erosion-rate variations in source areas and despite sediment mixing over hundreds of kilometres downstream, a distinct lithological signal is retained. Post-orogenic ranges yield catchment erosion rates of ∼ 6–11 m Myr−1 and silcrete-dominant areas erode as slow as ∼ 0.2 m Myr−1. 10Be–26Al inventories in stream sediments indicate that cumulative-burial terms increase downstream to mostly ∼ 400–800 kyr and up to ∼ 1.1 Myr. The magnitude of the burial signal correlates with increasing sediment cover downstream and reflects assimilation from storages with long exposure histories, such as alluvial fans, desert pavements, alluvial plains, and aeolian dunes. We propose that the tendency for large alluvial rivers to mask their 10Be–26Al source-area signal differs according to geomorphic setting. Signal preservation is favoured by (i) high sediment supply rates, (ii) high mean runoff, and (iii) a thick sedimentary basin pile. Conversely, signal masking prevails in landscapes of (i) low sediment supply and (ii) juxtaposition of sediment storages with notably different exposure histories. © Author(s) 2018. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Licence