Tectonic driving mechanism of Quaternary rock-uplift and topographic evolution in the northern-central Apennines from linear inversion of the drainage system

Simone Racano, Peter van der Beek,Claudio Faccenna, Victor Buleo Tebar,Domenico Cosentino,Taylor Schildgen

crossref(2024)

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摘要
The study of rock-uplift variations in time and space can provide insights into the processes driving the topographic evolution of mountain belts. The Apennine mountain chain of Italy, one of the more recently developed mountain belts in the Mediterranean region, has undergone a strong Quaternary rock-uplift phase, particularly in the north-central sector, which has shaped the present-day topography. It has long been recognized that drainage systems can record temporal and spatial variations in rock-uplift rates. Specifically, in detachment-limited systems with simple settings (e.g., no significant variations in drainage area over time, and catchments mostly draining perpendicular to regional structures), river profiles can be inverted to reconstruct their history of rock uplift. In this study, we present linear inversions of river profiles from 28 catchments along the eastern flank of the northern-central Apennines. These results are calibrated to infer rock-uplift rates by estimating the value of an erodibility parameter (K) from short-term incision rates and catchment-averaged erosion rates obtained from cosmogenic-nuclide data. Different approaches with constant and variable K have been applied to produce the rock-uplift model that best fits independent geochronological constraints about the uplift of the Apennine belt. Our findings suggest a spatially and temporally variable rock-uplift event that started around 2.5 to 3 Ma, following the last compressional orogenic phase and coinciding with the onset of extension. Furthermore, this rock-uplift pulse migrated southward at a rate of approximately 115 km/Myr. The highest rock-uplift rates (higher than 1.2 km/Myr) are observed in the region encompassing the highest Apennine massifs, such as the Laga Massif and the Gran Sasso Range. These results align with previous studies on Apennine paleoelevations, and they are consistent with numerical models and field evidence from other regions exhibiting rapid rock-uplift pulses and the migration of uplift related to slab break-off. Our results support the hypothesis of a break-off of the Adria slab under the central Apennines and its southward propagation over the last few million years.
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