Abstract: | The topographic margin of the Tibetan Plateau adjacent to the Sichuan Basin is one of the World's most impressive continental escarpments, rising from ~600 meters in the basin to peak elevations exceeding 6km across a horizontal distance of only 50~60km. Despite this relief, recent geodetic results (King et al., 1997; Chen et al., 1999) indicate that active shortening across this margin of the plateau is <3mm/a, and is within uncertainty of zero. Recent geodynamic models for active deformation in eastern Tibet (Royden et al., 1997) explain this discrepancy as a consequence of flow of lower crust from beneath the central plateau. These models predict relatively high rates of rock uplift in the near absence of horizontal shortening. Rivers along this margin of the plateau are actively incising into bedrock and afford the opportunity to better resolve the distribution of rock uplift along the margin. |