A mystery of baselevel controls -- major changes in Pleistocene Colorado
River incision across the Colorado Plateau
Abstract
Erosion can remain active and changing in landscapes long after tectonic
drivers have ceased, potentially due to local-geologic controls, climate
changes, or mantle dynamics. We present new fluvial incision histories
and terrain analyses of the Colorado River system through the central
Colorado Plateau to test ideas about what has caused the highly variable
erosion across this post-orogenic landscape. Results clarify that a
mysterious Middle Pleistocene (~1.5 to 0.3 Ma) erosional
hiatus (baselevel high) occurred in parts of the region, followed by
~250 m of rapid river incision in the central Colorado
Plateau over the last ~350 kyr. Our results potentially
support the hypothesis that the lengthy hiatus records a planated
landscape graded to the Colorado River before it propagated a signal of
baselevel fall from integration through western Grand Canyon in the
Pliocene. The subsequent, upstream-migrating incision has been
partitioned into multiple waves across the landscape due to the local
geologic controls of lava damming in western Grand Canyon, salt
tectonics in Cataract Canyon, and heterogenous and layered bedrock
throughout. A response-time model indicates that this transient
baselevel signal has taken 2-4 Myr to reach the central Colorado Plateau
and that it can only account for a small portion of total denudation in
the middle-late Cenozoic. This seminal landscape’s highly variable and
transient erosion highlights the complexity of landscape evolution even
in the absence of orogenic-scale tectonics and regardless of climatic
controls.