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Amount and controls of the quaternary denudation in the Ardennes massif (western Europe)

✍ Scribed by A. Demoulin; E. Hallot; G. Rixhon


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2009
Tongue
English
Weight
626 KB
Volume
34
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-1269

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✦ Synopsis


It is still debated whether the primary control on the middle Pleistocene denudation of the uplifted Ardennes massif (western Europe) is tectonic or climatic. Here, based on geomorphological observations, we calculate the amount of river incision and interfluve denudation in the Meuse basin upstream of Maastricht since 0β€’7 Ma and we show that the main response to tectonic forcing was incision. This allows us to provide first-order estimates of the tectonic and climatic contributions to the denudation of the Ardennes. From a dataset of 71 remnants of a terrace level dated ~0β€’7 Ma, we first derive a basin-scale functional relationship linking incision with distances to the regional base level (L c ) and to the source (L s ) in the Ourthe basin (pertaining to the Ardennian part of the Meuse basin). Expressed as

), I 0 being the incision measured at the basin outlet, this relationship calculates that river incision has removed 84 km 3 of rock in the Meuse basin upstream of Maastricht since 0β€’7 Ma. In the same time, 292 km 3 were eroded from the interfluves. A comparison of these volumes shows that the tectonically forced river incision accounts for ~22% of the total post-0β€’7 Ma denudation. Furthermore, the mean denudation rate corresponding to our geomorphological estimate of the overall denudation in the Meuse basin since 0β€’7 Ma amounts to 27 mm/ky, a figure significantly lower than the ~40 mm/ky mean rate derived from 10 Be studies of terrace deposits of the Meuse (Schaller et al., 2004). This suggests that, taken as a basin average, the 10 Be-derived rate is overestimated, probably due to an overrepresentation of the erosion products of the rapidly incising valleys in the alluvial deposits.


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