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GeoRef Categories
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Along-strike variation in catchment morphology and cosmogenic denudation rates reveal the pattern and history of footwall uplift, Main Gulf Escarpment, Baja California
A White Nile megalake during the last interglacial period
Abstract Atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons during the period 1945–1980 ushered in the ‘atomic age’ and released large quantities of anthropogenic radiogenic nuclides into the atmosphere. These radionuclides were subsequently deposited as fallout to the entire surface of the planet. While many have decayed to negligible levels, long-lived radionuclides persist and will do so for thousands of years. Isotopes of plutonium, 239 Pu (half-life 24 100 years) and 240 Pu (half-life 6563 years), provide the best chronological markers for the onset of this anthropogenic event both now and into the future due to their long half-lives, particle-reactivity, and the fact that they were present in negligible quantities prior to anthropogenic production and release. Chronostratigraphic markers established by distinct Pu concentration profiles and Pu isotope changes in sediment sequences and ice and coral cores can provide high-resolution dating over the last 60 years. However, even though fallout has ceased, it is found that the Pu inventory currently held in surface soil layers and the oceans will continue to supply Pu to sediment deposition zones for millennia and centuries, respectively. The delivery of this Pu will depend on soil erosion and bioturbation rates, and the rate of removal of dissolved Pu from the ocean.
Punctuated eustatic sea-level rise in the early mid-Holocene
Australian desert dune fields initiated with Pliocene–Pleistocene global climatic shift
Tectonic uplift, threshold hillslopes, and denudation rates in a developing mountain range
We successfully apply exposure dating using cosmogenic nuclides to natural terrain landslides in Hong Kong. Forty-five samples from eight landslide sites were exposure dated using 10 Be, and a subset of six samples was also dated using 26 Al. The sites comprised four large, deep-seated landslides featuring well-preserved rock scarps and associated debris lobes; two sites of rock and boulder fall; and two sites where scarps only are preserved. All of the deep-seated landslides gave ages within the last 50,000 yr, and the largest landslide gave an age of ∼32,000 yr. The youngest (∼2000 yr) and oldest (∼57,000 yr) landslide events dated came from the two sites of rock and boulder fall. Exposure ages from the deep-seated landslide scarps generally gave the most internally consistent ages for the landslides. However, only in rare cases did the landslide scarp ages overlap with those of boulders in the associated debris. Generally, boulders in the debris appeared to contain significant inheritance of cosmogenic nuclides from previous exposure and so yielded ages greater than those from the scarps. Surface exposure ages of ∼285,000 yr from boulders in the debris of two deep-seated landslides provide minimum ages considered to represent the original rock surfaces. This study has shown that it is possible to measure exposure ages of surfaces associated with large landslides from 70,000 yr down to a few thousand years old, despite low cosmogenic isotope production rates in Hong Kong due to low latitude and low altitude.