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Sediment production and transport from in situ-produced cosmogenic 10Be and river loads in the Napo River basin,an upper Amazon tributary of Ecuador and Peru
Authors:H Wittmann  F von Blanckenburg  JL Guyot  A Laraque  C Bernal  PW Kubik
Institution:1. Department of Geosciences, Penn State University, University Park, PA 16802, USA;2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, 14469, Germany;3. Department of Geology and School of Environment and Natural Resources, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05401, USA;1. Department of Geology, Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto, Campus do Morro do Cruzeiro, CEP: 35.400-000 Ouro Preto/MG, Brazil;2. CEREGE, UMR 6635 CNRS/Université Aix-Marseille, BP 80, 13545 Aix-en-Provence Cedex 4, France;3. Department of Geography, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Av. Antônio Carlos, 6.627 Pampulha, CEP 31270-901 Belo Horizonte/MG, Brazil
Abstract:Cosmogenic nuclide-based denudation rates and published erosion rates from recent river gauging in the Napo River basin (Peruvian Amazonia) are used to decipher erosion and sedimentation processes along a 600 km long transect from the headwaters to the lowlands. The sediment-producing headwaters to the Napo floodplain are the volcanically active Ecuadorian Andes, which discharge sediment at a cosmogenic nuclide-based denudation rate of 0.49 ± 0.12 mm/yr. This denudation rate was calculated from an average 10Be nuclide concentration of 2.2 ± 0.5 × 104 at/g(Qz) that was measured in bedload-derived quartz. Within the Napo lowlands, a significant drop in trunk stream 10Be nuclide concentrations relative to the Andean hinterland is recorded, with an average concentration of 1.2 ± 0.5 × 104 at/g(Qz). This nuclide concentration represents a mixture between the 10Be nuclide concentration of eroded floodplain deposits, and that of sediment eroded from the Andean hinterland that is now carried in the trunk stream. Evidence for addition of sediment from the floodplain to the trunk stream is provided by published decadal-scale sediment flux measurements from gauging stations operated in the Napo basin, from which an increase from 12 × 106 t/yr at the outflow of the Andes to ~47 × 106 t/yr at the confluence with the Solimões (upper Amazon River) is recorded. Therefore, approximately 35 × 106 t of floodplain sediment are added annually to the active Napo trunk stream. Combined with our nuclide concentration measurements, we can estimate that the eroded floodplain deposits yield a nuclide concentration of ~0.9 × 104 at/g(Qz) only. Under steady state surface erosion conditions, this nuclide concentration would translate to a denudation rate of the floodplain of ~0.47 mm/yr. However, we have no geomorphologic explanation for this high denudation rate within the low relief floodplain and thus suggest that this low-nuclide concentrated sediment is Andean-derived and would have been deposited in the floodplain at a time when erosion rates of the Andes were elevated. Therefore, the recently eroded floodplain sediment provides an Andean “paleo denudation rate” of 1.2 mm/yr that was calculated for high Andean production rates. A likely period for elevated erosion rates is the LGM, where climate and vegetation cover of the Andes differed from that of the Holocene. A possible cause for the erosion of the floodplain is the tectonic uplift of the Eastern Andes, which progressively shifts the Napo River northwards. Hence, the river cuts into ancient lowland sediment, which is admixed to the Andean sediment carried in the main Napo River.
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