Squeezing river catchments through tectonics: Shortening and erosion across the Indus Valley, NW Himalaya
2017
Tectonic displacement of drainage divides
and the consequent deformation of river
networks during crustal shortening have
been proposed for a number of mountain
ranges, but never tested. In order to preserve
crustal strain in surface topography,
surface displacements across thrust faults
must be retained without being recovered by
consequent erosion. Quantification of these
competing processes and the implications for
catchment topography have not previously
been demonstrated. Here, we use structural
mapping combined with dating of terrace
sediments to measure Quaternary shortening
across the Indus River valley in Ladakh, NW
Himalaya. We demonstrate ~0.21 m k.y.–1 of
horizontal displacement since ca. 45 ka on
the Stok thrust in Ladakh, which defines
the southwestern margin of the Indus Valley
catchment and is the major back thrust
to the Tethyan Himalaya in this region. We
use normalized river channel gradients of the
tributaries that drain into the Indus River to
show that the lateral continuation of the Stok
thrust was active for at least 70 km along
strike. Shortening rates combined with fault
geometries yield vertical displacement rates
that are compared to time-equivalent erosion
rates in the hanging wall derived from
published detrital 10Be analyses. The results
demonstrate that vertical displacement rates
across the Stok thrust were approximately
twice that of the time-equivalent erosion
rates, implying a net horizontal displacement
of the surface topography, and hence
narrowing of the Indus Valley at ~0.1 m
k.y.–1. A fill terrace records debris-flow emplacement
linked to thrust activity, resulting
in damming of the valley and extensive lake development. Conglomerates beneath
some of the modern alluvial fans indicate
a northeastward shift of the Indus River
channel since ca. 45 ka to its present course
against the opposite
side of the valley from
the Stok thrust. The integration of structural,
topographic, erosional, and sedimentological
data provides the first demonstration of the
tectonic convergence of drainage divides in
a mountain range and yields a model of the
surface processes involved.
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