Late Miocene erosion and evolution of topography along the western slope of the Colorado Rockies

Russell Rosenberg, Eric Kirby, Andres Aslan, Karl Karlstrom, Matt Heizler, Will Ouimet

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

In the Colorado Rocky Mountains, the association of high topography and low seismic velocity in the underlying mantle suggests that recent changes in lithospheric buoyancy may have been associated with surface uplift of the range. This paper examines the relationships among late Cenozoic fl uvial incision, channel steepness, and mantle velocity domains along the western slope of the northern Colorado Rockies. New 40Ar/39Ar ages on basalts capping the Tertiary Browns Park Formation range from ca. 11 to 6 Ma and provide markers from which we reconstruct incision along the White, Yampa, and Little Snake rivers. The magnitude of post-10 Ma incision varies systematically from north to south, increasing from ~ 500 m along the Little Snake River to ~1500 m along the Colorado River. Spatial variations in the amount of late Cenozoic incision are matched by metrics of channel steepness; the upper Colorado River and its tributaries (e.g., Gunnison and Dolores rivers) are two to three times steeper than the Yampa and White rivers, and these variations are independent of both discharge and lithologic substrate. The coincidence of steep river profi les with deep incision suggests that the fl uvial systems are dynamically adjusting to an external forcing but is not readily explained by a putative increase in erosivity associated with late Cenozoic climate change. Rather, channel steepness correlates with the position of the channels relative to low-velocity mantle. We suggest that the history of late Miocene-present incision and channel adjustment refl ects long-wavelength tilting across the western slope of the Rocky Mountains.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)641-663
Number of pages23
JournalGeosphere
Volume10
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Geology
  • Stratigraphy

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