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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/3982
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Title: | Dating the Tejo river lower terraces in the Ródão area (Portugal) to assess the role of tectonics and uplift |
Authors: | Cunha, P., Martins, A. Huot, S. Murray, A. Raposo, L., |
Keywords: | Luminescence dating Fluvial terraces Tectonics Incision rates Uplift Portugal |
Issue Date: | 2008 |
Publisher: | Elsevier |
Citation: | Cunha, P., Martins, A., Huot, S., Murray, A., Raposo, L., 2008. Dating the Tejo river lower terraces in the Ródão area (Portugal) to assess the role of tectonics and uplift. Geomorphology 2008, 102, 43-54 |
Abstract: | The Tejo river is one of the major drainages in Iberian Peninsula; it is a long-lived system (ca. 3.4 Ma) and
provides an archive of long-term landscape development and environmental change controlled by tectonics,
climate and eustasy. The most upstream Portuguese reach of the Tejo river, ∼200 km from the Atlantic coast,
shows evidence for five fluvial terraces (T1 to T5) with elevations reaching more than 120 m above the
modern river bed. A chronological framework for these terraces is established here by integrating
geomorphological, stratigraphical and archaeological information with ages from luminescence dating.
Optically stimulated luminescence dating of K-feldspar, (involving the correction for anomalous fading of the
luminescence signal), indicates that the younger terraces have a probable age range of: T5 — 31 to 40 ka; and
T4 — 100 to ∼280 ka. We deduce that the related major fluvial changes are likely to have been as follows:
∼10 m of aggradation from ∼280 to 100 ka (0.06 m/ka); 14 m of incision from 100 to 40 ka (0.23 m/ka); 8 m of
aggradation from40 to 31 ka (0.89 m/ka); 16mof incision during the last 31 ka (0.52m/ka). These values indicate
that the duration and rate of both aggradation and river downcutting episodeswere variable. There iswidespread
evidence for neotectonic activity in this intraplate region. Neither eustatic nor climatic changes during the
Quaternary provide clear trends that might explain the observed pattern of valley incision, thuswe conclude that
this tectonic activity is the most likely driving mechanism. In the study area, the probable age of the Tejo river
sediments deposited before the beginning of valley incision allows the calculation of a time-averaged incision rate
of∼0.07 to 0.10 m/ka over the last∼2.6Ma. This long-termincisionwas probably determined by an increase in the
relative uplift rate, resulting from the intensification of intraplate compressive stress. During the late Cenozoic
fluvial incision stage, the Ródão depression underwent less uplift than the adjacent areas along the river, inwhich
the Tejo has incised a narrow valley into basement rock, with almost no terrace development. Terrace formation
was also promoted by soft bedrock (Tertiary arkoses) and by impoundment of alluvium behind resistant barriers
crossed by the river. Geomorphological evidence for terrace tectonic offset was also supported by luminescence
dating. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/3982 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | CGE - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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