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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2012-09-01
    Description: We conducted coupled U-Pb dating and Hf isotope analysis of detrital zircon in modern sand of the Yalu River in southern Tibet. Our work indicates that the presence or absence of distinctive zircon populations in the Yalu main stream depends critically on the geometric configuration of the tributary rivers. The proportion of upper-stream zircon populations in the Yalu River sand decreases systematically in the downstream direction, which is caused mainly by zircon addition from new source areas in the downstream region. In some extreme cases, the upstream zircon signals can completely be lost in the downstream region due to this dilution effect. Analysis of sand modal composition reveals a downstream increase in the proportion of lithic fragments along the Yalu River, from ~40% to ~60% over a distance of ~600 km. This may be attributed to the combined effect of an eastward increase in the topographic relief and an eastward increase in annual precipitation across the Yalu River drainage basin. Quantitative comparison of detrital-zircon ages between the Yalu River sand and Neogene sediments of the eastern Himalayan foreland supports a previous proposal that the Yalu River once flowed directly over the eastern Himalaya, without going around the Himalaya through its eastern syntaxis. The shortcut appears to have been transient, as it is only recorded in specific stratigraphic horizons of foreland sediments. The inferred Yalu River diversion may have been caused by past advances of glaciers or emplacements of giant landslides that temporarily dammed the Yalu River.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7606
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-05-26
    Description: This study investigates the combined effects of Quaternary climate change and tectonically induced topography on the Yarlung River drainage-system evolution in the eastern Himalaya. Our work integrates field mapping, geomorphological analysis, stratigraphy, sedimentology, optically stimulated luminescence dating, radiocarbon dating, and detrital-zircon dating of a Holocene valley-fill sequence in a Yarlung River tributary. This holistic approach reveals an aggradational event, which started at or soon after 24–20 k.y. B.P. and continued to or after 9.2–8.0 k.y. B.P. across the Himalayan drainage divide between the east-flowing Yarlung River in the north and the south-flowing Subansiri River in the south. The aggradational event was associated with a major phase of glacier advance during a period of warm and wet climate conditions in the eastern Himalaya; it was expressed by the deposition of a valley-fill sequence across the modern Yarlung-Subansiri drainage divide. South-flowing fluvial sediments across the divide and the elevation distribution of the fluvial terraces require the existence of a major glacier dam that either blocked a tributary or the main trunk of the Yarlung River. Although we are unable to differentiate the two competing scenarios, our work reveals that combined Holocene climate change and tectonically induced topography have played a major role in controlling rapid shifts in drainage geometry at a time scale of 〈10 k.y. across the Himalaya.
    Print ISSN: 1941-8264
    Electronic ISSN: 1947-4253
    Topics: Geosciences
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