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Description
Mountain landscapes reflect competition between tectonic processes acting to build topography and erosive processes acting to wear it down. In temperate mountain landscapes, bedrock rivers are the primary erosional agent, setting both the pace of landscape evolution and form of the surrounding topography. Theory predicts that river steepness is sensitive

Mountain landscapes reflect competition between tectonic processes acting to build topography and erosive processes acting to wear it down. In temperate mountain landscapes, bedrock rivers are the primary erosional agent, setting both the pace of landscape evolution and form of the surrounding topography. Theory predicts that river steepness is sensitive to climatic, tectonic, and lithologic factors, which dictate the rates and mechanics of erosional processes. Thus, encoded into topography is an archive of information about forces driving landscape evolution. Decoding this archive, however, is fraught and climate presents a particularly challenging conundrum: despite decades of research describing theoretically how climate should affect topography, unambiguous natural examples from tectonically active landscapes where variations in climate demonstrably influence topography are elusive. In this dissertation, I first present a theoretical framework describing how the spatially varied nature of orographic rainfall patterns, which are ubiquitous features of mountain climates, complicate expectations about how climate should influence river steepness and erosion. I then apply some of these ideas to the northern-central Andes. By analyzing river profiles spanning more than 1500 km across Peru and Bolivia, I show that the regional orographic rainfall pattern this landscape experiences systematically influences fluvial erosional efficiency and thus topography. I also show how common simplifying assumptions built into conventional topographic analysis techniques may introduce biases that undermine detection of climatic signatures in landscapes where climate, tectonics, and lithology all covary – a common condition in mountain landscapes where these techniques are often used. I continue by coupling this analysis with published erosion rates and a new dataset of 25 cosmogenic 10Be catchment average erosion rates. Once the influence of climate is accounted for, functional relationships emerge among channel steepness, erosion rate, and lithology. I then use these functional relationships to produce a calibrated erosion rate map that spans over 300 km of the southern Peruvian Andes. These results demonstrate that accounting for the effects of climate significantly enhances the ability to decode channel steepness patterns. Along with this comes the potential to better understand rates and patterns of tectonic processes, and identify seismic hazards associated with tectonic activity using topography.
ContributorsLeonard, Joel Scott (Author) / Whipple, Kelin (Thesis advisor) / Arrowsmith, Ramon (Committee member) / Christensen, Philip (Committee member) / Forte, Adam (Committee member) / Heimsath, Arjun (Committee member) / Hodges, Kip (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
The South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS) marks a major decoupling horizon in the Himalaya, separating the highly metamorphosed infrastructure in the footwall from the weakly to unmetamorphosed superstructure in the hanging wall. The STDS stretches the entire range and is likely one of the most significant deformational features of the

The South Tibetan Detachment System (STDS) marks a major decoupling horizon in the Himalaya, separating the highly metamorphosed infrastructure in the footwall from the weakly to unmetamorphosed superstructure in the hanging wall. The STDS stretches the entire range and is likely one of the most significant deformational features of the orogen, but its spatial and temporal evolution remain relatively unconstrained. As its name suggests, the STDS is a system of faults which occur at slightly different structural levels and are often diachronous. Detailed studies on the different strands are needed to understand the slip history of the system as a whole, which in turn will improve understanding of Himalayan orogenesis, thus informing tectonic models for continental orogenesis in general. I focus on some of the best exposed strands of the STDS which are located in the Annapurna region of Nepal. Outcrops within the shear zones of basal structures in the Kali Gandaki and Marsyandi valleys – the Annapurna and Chame detachments – contain leucogranites that are variably deformed via ductile slip on the detachments. I used U/Pb zircon and Th/Pb monazite geochronology to constrain emplacement ages of these leucogranites, which suggest ductile slip ceased prior to 14.95 ± 0.78 Ma and 16.0 ± 1.1 Ma on the Annapurna and Chame detachments respectively. 40Ar/ 39Ar muscovite and biotite, (U-Th)/He zircon and apatite thermochronology data and resulting thermal-kinematic models for samples I collected in the shear zones and footwalls of these detachments suggest further slip was ongoing on both detachments until ca. 12 Ma, although the majority of slip on the Chame detachment likely ceased by ca. 15-14 Ma. I also collected samples in the footwall of a structurally higher detachment in the Marsyandi and the resulting cooling ages and thermal-kinematic models suggest slip was contemporaneous with that on the lower Chame detachment. The new constraints on N-S extension on the STDS in the Annapurna region presented in this dissertation call into question the popular idea of a geodynamic change from N-S to E-W extension in the central Himalaya during the early Miocene, and emphasize the importance of the STDS as a major decoupling horizon.
ContributorsPye, Alexandra Eleanor (Author) / Hodges, Kip (Thesis advisor) / Whipple, Kelin (Committee member) / Barboni, Melanie (Committee member) / van Soest, Matthijs (Committee member) / McDonald, Christopher (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
In this thesis, I investigate possible formation processes in the northern Claritas Fossae and the large Thaumasia graben on Mars. In particular, I assess three proposed formation hypotheses for the region: a mega-landslide across the Thaumasia plateau, originating in Tharsis and moving to the south-west; a rift system pulling apart

In this thesis, I investigate possible formation processes in the northern Claritas Fossae and the large Thaumasia graben on Mars. In particular, I assess three proposed formation hypotheses for the region: a mega-landslide across the Thaumasia plateau, originating in Tharsis and moving to the south-west; a rift system pulling apart Claritas Fossae and opening the large Thaumasia graben generally propagating in a north-south direction: and extension caused by uplifting from underlying dike swarms. Using digital terrain models (DTMs) from the High Resolution Stereo Camera (HRSC) aboard Mars Express and visual images from the Context Camera (CTX) aboard the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO), I analyzed the geomorphic and structural context of the region. Specifically, I produced geomorphologic and structural feature maps, conducted sector diagram analyses of fault propagation direction, calculated and compared extension and strain in local and regional samples, analyzed along strike throw-profiles of faults, and conducted surface age estimates through crater counting. I found that no single formation mechanism fully explains the surface features seen in Northern Claritas Fossae today. Instead I, propose the following sequence of events led to the surface characteristics we now observe. The region most likely underwent two episodes of uplift and extension due to sub-surface magmatic intrusions, then experienced an extensional event which produced the large Thaumasia graben. This was followed by the emplacement of a layer of lava burying the bottom of the Thaumasia graben and the eastern edge of the region. Additional extension followed across the eastern portion of the study area, and finally of a young lava flow was emplaced abutting and overprinting the southwestern edge.
ContributorsStuder-Ellis, Genevieve Lynn (Author) / Williams, David A. (Thesis advisor) / Christensen, Philip R. (Thesis advisor) / Arrowsmith, J. R. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2019
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Description
Faults found in the arid to semi-arid Basin and Range Physiographic province of the southwestern US are given broad age definitions in terms of which features appear to be the oldest. Particularly in the northwestern corner of Arizona, detailed geomorphic studies on the tectonic history and timing of faulting are

Faults found in the arid to semi-arid Basin and Range Physiographic province of the southwestern US are given broad age definitions in terms of which features appear to be the oldest. Particularly in the northwestern corner of Arizona, detailed geomorphic studies on the tectonic history and timing of faulting are not widespread. At the base of the Virgin Mountains in northwestern Arizona is a fault scarp along the Piedmont Fault line. This normal fault crosses a series of alluvial fans that are filled with sediments of ambiguous ages. Previous studies that were done in this region find a broad, Miocene age for the exhumation and uplift of these surfaces, with some indications of Laramide faulting history. However, specific fault characteristics and a time constraint of the tectonic history of the Piedmont Fault scarp has yet to be established. Here, we aim to determine the age, fault-slip rate, seismic history, and potential hazard of the fault scarp near Scenic and Littlefield, Arizona through structure from motion (SfM) modeling, which is a form of photogrammetry using a drone. In addition, we distinguish the climatic and tectonic influences on the geomorphology observed along the scarp through analysis along the fault line. With data collected from a ~500 m section of the fault, we present results from a digital elevation model (DEM) and orthophotos derived through the SfM modelling. Based on field observations and morphologic dating, we determine that the Piedmont Fault experiences an approximately continuous fault-slip and an earthquake recurrence interval in the range of 7,000 years. The approximate age of the scarp is 16.0 ka ± 5 kyr. Therefore, we conclude that the earthquake hazard posed to nearby cities is minimal but not nonexistent. Future work includes further analysis of fault profiles due to uncertainty in the present one and Terrestrial Cosmogenic Nuclide (TCN) dating of samples taken from the tops of boulders in a residual debris flow sitting on faulted and unfaulted alluvia. Determining the ages for these boulder surfaces can hopefully further inform our knowledge of the tectonic activity present in the North Virgin Mountains.
ContributorsApel, Emily Virginia (Author) / Heimsath, Arjun (Thesis director) / Arrowsmith, Ramon (Committee member) / Whipple, Kelin (Committee member) / School of Molecular Sciences (Contributor) / School of International Letters and Cultures (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2020-12