Landforms and landscape evolution in the Skardu, Shigar and Braldu Valleys, Central Karakoram

The Central Karakoram, which includes K2 in Pakistan, is one of the most rapidly rising areas on Earth and exhibits complex topography and extreme relief. Impressive valley fills and glacial landforms are present throughout the valleys. The dynamics of landscape evolution of the region are currently...

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Veröffentlicht in:Geomorphology (Amsterdam, Netherlands) Netherlands), 2009-01, Vol.103 (2), p.251-267
Hauptverfasser: Seong, Yeong Bae, Bishop, Michael P., Bush, Andrew, Clendon, Penny, Copland, Luke, Finkel, Robert C., Kamp, Ulrich, Owen, Lewis A., Shroder, John F.
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container_end_page 267
container_issue 2
container_start_page 251
container_title Geomorphology (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
container_volume 103
creator Seong, Yeong Bae
Bishop, Michael P.
Bush, Andrew
Clendon, Penny
Copland, Luke
Finkel, Robert C.
Kamp, Ulrich
Owen, Lewis A.
Shroder, John F.
description The Central Karakoram, which includes K2 in Pakistan, is one of the most rapidly rising areas on Earth and exhibits complex topography and extreme relief. Impressive valley fills and glacial landforms are present throughout the valleys. The dynamics of landscape evolution of the region are currently not well understood. Consequently, the landforms were mapped and assessed in the Skardu, Shigar, and Braldu valleys, to elucidate the spatio-temporal scale dependencies of surface processes active in the region. These valleys were examined using geomorphic field methods, remote sensing, geomorphometry, and terrestrial cosmogenic nuclides (TCNs) surface exposure dating. The glaciers in this region have oscillated considerably throughout the Late Quaternary, and four glacial stages have been recognized including at least six glacial advances. Surface processes readjusted after glacier retreat, and ubiquitous mass movements and catastrophic landsliding transported material from steep slopes to valley bottoms, while glaciofluvial meltwater and glacier outburst floods redistributed sediment down valley. Glacier geochronology and late Holocene ages of the outburst flood deposits indicate that landscape evolution has been dominated by glaciation and paraglaciation during the late Quaternary.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.04.026
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1872-695X
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Central Karakoram
Glaciation
Glacier erosion
Landscape evolution
Outburst flood deposits Late Quaternary
Paraglaciation
Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide (TCN) exposure dating
title Landforms and landscape evolution in the Skardu, Shigar and Braldu Valleys, Central Karakoram
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