P7: Transient landscape evolution through response models to plate and plume mode

Supervisors

Prof. Michael Krautblatter, Prof. Anke Friedrich

Advisors (int.)

Dr. Simon Kübler (LMU)

Advisors (ext.)

Dr. Kerry Leith (ETHZ), Prof. Greg Tucker (Univ. Colorado)

Description

Landscapes respond to dynamic topography changes by mass redistribution. While existing landscape evolution models often apply diffusion models for the calculation of slope evolution, we will also apply physically constrained slope evolution models in this project. Initially our landscape evolution models will take information on space-time patterns of surface uplift and subsidence from P6 and P8 and from P1, P3 and P4 and will be designed to operate on interregional scales to model the long-term landscape evolution. With input from P6, the landscape evolution models will be applied to individual plume-mode systems with further corrections for isostatic response (P4, P8). We will also model exemplary valley transects with slopes in (dis-)continuum by mechanically constrained slope-evolution models, to include the effects of horizontal stresses produced by the plate and plume modes. The controls of stress environments on valley evolution can be implemented via thresholds (1) on microcrack initiation as a percentage of uniaxial compressive strength, (2) on principal stress ratio (σ1 / σ3) or (3) on differential stress (σ1–σ3) (Leith et al 2014). This project will design a physically derived landscape evolution model applicable to both, compressive (convergent plates) and extensive (plume mode) settings controlled by the uplift from the geodynamic model and the crustal stresses from the lithosphere model and will produce differential erosion rates spanning over at least 3 magnitudes that feedback as isostatic response to the geodynamic and lithosphere model.

Main objectives

  • Develop forward models of stream-power driven incision to visualize the paleotopographic evolution of target regions and adapt the model design for the anticipated interregional scales of concern to the RTG.
  • Calibrate the forward models by sensitivity analysis of relevant parameter sets such as steepness index, hillslope diffusivity, erosion rates, sediment settling velocity. 
  • Co-develop (jointly with P3/P4) a calibrated inverse modeling strategy to link with input/output from other RTGs by incorporating physical parameters constrained empirically from magnetostratigraphic, sedimentary, thermochronological information bearing on the age and evolution of the landscape. Modeling of radial stream networks and concentric escarpments and their evolution, generated during plume uplift and dispersal.
  • Deriving parameterizations of uplift rates and horizontal crustal stresses produced by the geodynamic and lithosphere model in this proposal by adapting local-scale models to regional scales. 
  • Modelling differential erosion rates spanning over at least 3 magnitudes that feedback as isostatic response to the geodynamic and lithosphere model

RTG coupling

Input:

  • Trajectory of Earth’s dynamic topography induced by mantle flow from past to present from P6.
  • Contemporary uplift rates from P1, sedimentation rates from P3, and geological uplift rates from P4 serving to verify the landscape models

Output:

  • Quantification of interregional surface mass redistributions from landscape evolution for P4 and P8.
  • A refined and physically consistent model of paleotopography as a function of time serving as tests for assumed model parameters in P6. 
  • Results of river profile analysis (P3).
  • Sensitivity of model parameters (P9).
  • State of the art visualization of model output and observational data sets (in connection with P10)