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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Tectonic Exhumation and Climate Driven Erosion in Extensional Mountain Blocks: Two Examples from California, USA

Mason, Cody Curtis 19 May 2017 (has links)
The Pacific-North America plate boundary in central and southern California has a complex tectonic history, and constraints are poor for inception of an extensional fault system linked to the southern San Andreas fault, a major tectonic element of this plate boundary. Furthermore, decades of research has shown relationships between climate, tectonics, and surface processes in most orogens across the globe (e.g. Alps, Himalaya, Andes, Alaska Ranges), however the role climate plays in modulating erosion and mass fluxes from extensional mountains blocks to sedimentary basins over 104-5 yr timescales is debated. In the eastern California-Walker Lane shear zone, exposures of sedimentary basin fill allow inversion of erosion- and sediment-flux rates from a linked catchment-fan system within an extensional block. In this dissertation, I present two field and geo-thermochronology based studies that explore research topics related by common tectonic setting and geography within the Pacific-North America plate boundary. First I present new low-temperature thermochronology (apatite U-Th-Sm/He) and thermal history modeling to document the kinematic evolution of the Santa Rosa mountains, where the cooling history constrains initiation timing of the west Salton Detachment fault, and the southern San Andreas fault system. I document an age of ca. 8 Ma for exhumation initiation of the Santa Rosa block, from paleodepths of ~4.5–3 km, at vertical rates of ~0.15–0.36 mm/yr, accelerating to ~1.3 km/Ma since ca. 1.2 Ma during initiation of the San Jacinto fault zone. Second, I present a new data set of cosmogenic radionuclide-derived burial ages and paleodenudation rates (26Al/10Be) from the Pleasant Canyon complex in the Panamint Range, and show that denudation rate and sediment flux have varied by a factor of ~2x since the middle Pleistocene. I conclude high frequency variability is driven by climate change, and not tectonic perturbations, as supported by published constraints for exhumation timing. The middle Pleistocene transition from 40–100 ka periodicity may drive the observed changes, a tentative conclusion that makes testable predictions for stratigraphic records of past climate in other locations. Empirical evidence for climate-modulated erosion and sediment flux provides valuable constraints for numerical models of landscape evolution and sedimentary basin architecture. / Ph. D.
2

Coherent Holocene Expansion of a Tropical Andean and African Glacier

Vickers, Anthony Cole January 2018 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Jeremy D. Shakun / Glaciers in the tropics have undergone significant retreat in the past several decades, but the magnitude of this retreat in the long-term context of the Holocene has mostly been qualitatively assessed. This study produces a quantitative reconstruction of Holocene glacier extent relative to today from the Quelccaya Ice Cap, Peru, and the Rwenzori Mountains of east Africa. I use measurements of in situ 14C and 10Be from bedrock that was recently exposed by glacier retreat to constrain possible bedrock exposure and erosion histories at each site. The results are strikingly similar in both areas, and suggest that ice was generally smaller than today during the first half of the Holocene and larger than today for most, if not all, of the last several millennia. These findings give evidence toward a coherent Holocene expansion of glaciers across the tropics, and suggest that recent retreat is unusual in a multi-millennial context. / Thesis (MS) — Boston College, 2018. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Earth and Environmental Sciences.
3

Evaluation of Coupled Erosional Processes and Landscape Evolution in the Teton Range, Wyoming

Tranel, Lisa Marie 13 July 2010 (has links)
The evolution of mountain landscapes is controlled by complex interactions between large-scale tectonic, surficial and climate conditions. Dominant processes are attributed to creating characteristic features of the landscape, but topographic features are the cumulative result of coupled surficial processes, each locally effective in a different climate or elevation regime. The focus of erosion by glacial, fluvial, or mass wasting processes is highly sensitive to small changes in boundary conditions, therefore spatial and temporal variability can be high when observed over short time scales. This work evaluated methods for dissecting the history of complex alpine landscapes to understand the role of individual processes influenced by changing climate and underlying bedrock. It also investigated how individual and combined mechanisms of surficial processes influenced the evolution of topography in the Teton Range in Wyoming. Detrital apatite (U-Th)/He thermochronology and cosmogenic radionuclide erosion rates were applied to determine spatial and temporal variability of erosion in the central catchments of the range. Spatial variability existed between the glacial and fluvial systems, indicating that sediment erosion and deposition by these processes was controlled by short-term variability in climate conditions. Effective glacial incision also controlled other processes, specifically enhancing rock fall activity and inhibiting fluvial incision. Short-term erosion rates were highly variable and were controlled by stochastic processes, particularly hillslope failures in response to slope oversteepening due to glacial incision and orientation and spacing of bedrock fractures. Erosion rates averaged over 10 ky time scales were comparable to long-term exhumation rates measured in the Teton Range. The similarity of spatial erosion patterns to predicted uniform erosion and the balance between intermediate and long-term erosion rates suggests the landscape of the Teton Range is approaching steady-state, but frequent stochastic processes, short-term erosional variability and coupled processes maintain rugged topographic relief. / Ph. D.

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