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The effects of deforestation on slope and channel evolution in the tectonically active Darjeeling Himalaya

✍ Scribed by Wojciech Froehlich; Leszek Starkel


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1993
Tongue
English
Weight
415 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0360-1269

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✦ Synopsis


The main indicators of Quaternary tectonic uplift are the young mountain slopes of the Darjeeling Himalaya, rising straight above the Ganga-Brahmaputra foredeep, fragments of uplifted river terraces and fresh fault scarps. Evidence for the continuation of the uplift includes downcutting of the Tista and other straight rivers in the bedrock, continuing aggradation in the plains and overriding of the metamorphic rocks on the alluvia. Owing to deforestation and extensive land use, the earlier natural tendency of a dominance of channel incision over slope degradation has changed to prevailing aggradation, even in steep valley reaches, caused by intensive slope mass movements and the overloading of the mountain creeks. Aggradation progresses upstream along the rivers dissecting the mountain front.