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European Geosciences Union, Earth Surface Dynamics, 4(3), p. 463-482, 2015

DOI: 10.5194/esurf-3-463-2015

Copernicus Publications, Earth Surface Dynamics Discussions, 2(3), p. 327-369

DOI: 10.5194/esurfd-3-327-2015

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The periglacial engine of mountain erosion – Part 2: Modelling large-scale landscape evolution

Journal article published in 2015 by D. L. Egholm ORCID, J. L. Andersen ORCID, M. F. Knudsen, J. D. Jansen ORCID, S. B. Nielsen
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

An increasing number of studies point to a strong periglacial control on bedrock erosion in mountain landscapes. Periglacial processes have also been suggested to control the formation of block-fields on high-elevation, low-relief surfaces (summit flats) found in many alpine landscapes. However, to which degree periglacial processes took part in accelerating global erosion rates in response to Late Cenozoic cooling still remains as an unanswered question. In this study, we present a landscape evolution model that incorporates two periglacial processes; frost cracking and frost creep, which both depend on the mean annual temperature (MAT) and sediment thickness. The model experiments allow us to time-integrate the contribution of periglacial processes to mountain topography over million-year time scales. It is a robust result of our experiments that periglacial frost activity leads to the formation of smooth summit flats at elevations dominated by cold climatic conditions through time periods of millions of years. Furthermore, a simplistic scaling of temperatures to δ 18 O values through the late-Cenozoic indicates that many of the highest summit flats in mid- to high-latitude mountain ranges can have formed prior to the Quaternary. The model experiments also suggest that cooling in the Quaternary accelerated periglacial erosion by expanding the areas affected by periglacial erosion significantly. A computational experiment combining glacial and periglacial erosion furthermore suggests that landscape modifications associated with glacial activity may increase the long-term average efficiency of the frost-related processes.