Abstract
Models of relief development generally assume that eroded products are evacuated far from the landscape, whereas in nature they are often deposited at the foot of mountain belts, within continental environments. Because piedmont aggradation can modify the base level for erosion, we investigate the influence of piedmont sedimentation on the dynamics of an upstream relief. We developed an experimental study of relief dynamics using laboratory-scale models submitted to uplift under runoff-driven erosion. We compare the dynamics of topographies surrounded, or not, by a depositional belt made of eroded products coming from upstream. Piedmont aggradation acts on the dynamics of the upstream relief by modifying the relative uplift rate (applied uplift rate minus aggradation rate) that denudation tends to balance. Relief denudes at a lower rate than the applied uplift rate, so the mean elevation of the uplifting topography rises. When the time scale of aggradation is higher than the time scale of relief development, the topography cannot reach a steady state between denudation and the applied uplift rate as long as aggradation occurs. However, in this case denudation balances a continuously varying relative uplift rate during a dynamic equilibrium phase of the topography.