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In Review (Geology): Alpine Landscape Evolution Dominated by Cirque RetreatDespite the abundance in alpine terrain of glacially dissected landscapes, the magnitude and geometry of glacial erosion can rarely be defined. In the eastern Kyrgyz Range, a widespread unconformity exhumed as a geomorphic surface provides a regional datum with which to calibrate erosion. As tectonically driven surface uplift has progressively pushed this surface into the zone of ice accumulation, glacial erosion has overprinted the landscape. With as little as 500 m of incision into rocks underlying the unconformity, distinctive glacial valleys display their deepest incision adjacent to cirque headwalls. The expansion of north-facing glacial cirques at the expense of south-facing valleys has driven the drainage divide southwards at rates up to 2 to 3 times the rate of valley incision. Existing ice-flux-based glacial erosion rules incompletely model expansion of glacial valleys via cirque retreat into the low-gradient unconformity remnants. Local processes that either directly sap cirque headwalls or inhibit erosion down-glacier appear to control, at least initially, alpine landscape evolution.
Document ID
20050185564
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other
Authors
Oskin, Michael
(North Carolina Univ. Chapel Hill, NC, United States)
Burbank, Doug
(California Univ. Santa Barbara, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2005
Subject Category
Geophysics
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG5-10520
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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