Using the stochastic-threshold incision model to understand the tectonic
expression on fluvial topography: theory and application to the Dadu
River basin, eastern Tibetan Plateau
Abstract
The non-linear reliance of channel steepness on erosion rates can be
reconciled by the stochastic-threshold incision model that incorporates
river incision threshold and discharge probability distribution into
erosion efficiency. Here, we explored the usage of the model in river
longitudinal profile inversion, by assuming time-dependent tectonic
forcing and a linear exponent that relates channel incision to slope. We
developed an analytical solution to the model equation and an inverse
scheme to retrieve relative uplift rate history, whose validity was
based on the theoretical demonstration on knickpoint preservation.
Application of the inverse scheme to the main trunks of the Dadu River
basin in the eastern Tibetan Plateau produced a history with two-phase
increases in the uplift/incision rates, which is similar to the results
from low-temperature thermochronology. Thus, our analytical procedures
provide new insights into the link of tectonic uplift and river profile
evolution, when channel steepness depends on erosion rates non-linearly.