Riverine measurements of sediment and solute transport give empirical basin-scale estimates of bed-load, suspended-sediment, and silicate-solute fluxes for 100,000 km2 of northwestern California and western Oregon. This spatially explicit sediment budget shows the multifaceted control of geology and physiography on the rates and processes of fluvial denudation. Bed-load transport is greatest for steep basins, particularly in areas underlain by the accreted Klamath terrane. Bed-load flux commonly decreases downstream as clasts convert to suspended load by breakage and attrition, particularly for softer rock types. Suspended load correlates strongly with lithology, basin slope, precipitation, and wildfire disturbance. It is highest in steep regions of soft rocks, and our estimates suggest that much of the suspended load is derived from bed-load comminution. Dissolution, measured by basin-scale silicate-solute yield, constitutes a third of regional landscape denudation. Solute yield correlates with precipitation and is proportionally greatest in low-gradient and wet basins and for high parts of the Cascade Range, where undissected Quaternary volcanic rocks soak in 2−3 m of annual precipitation. Combined, these estimates provide basin-scale erosion rates ranging from ∼50 t ∙ km−2 ∙ yr−1 (approximately equivalent to 0.02 mm ∙ yr−1) for low-gradient basins such as the Willamette River to ∼500 t ∙ km−2 ∙ yr−1 (∼0.2 mm ∙ yr−1) for steep coastal drainages. The denudation rates determined here from modern measurements are less than those estimated by longer-term geologic assessments, suggesting episodic disturbances such as fire, flood, seismic shaking, and climate change significantly add to long-term landscape denudation.
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Research Article|
January 11, 2021
Eroding Cascadia—Sediment and solute transport and landscape denudation in western Oregon and northwestern California
Jim E. O’Connor;
Jim E. O’Connor
1
U.S. Geological Survey, 2130 SW 5th Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97201, USA
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Joseph F. Mangano;
Joseph F. Mangano
2
U.S. Geological Survey, 230 Collins Road, Boise, Idaho 83702, USA
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Daniel R. Wise;
Daniel R. Wise
1
U.S. Geological Survey, 2130 SW 5th Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97201, USA
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Joshua R. Roering
Joshua R. Roering
3
Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon 97403, USA
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GSA Bulletin (2021)
Article history
received:
30 Mar 2020
rev-recd:
21 Aug 2020
accepted:
30 Oct 2020
first online:
11 Jan 2021
Citation
Jim E. O’Connor, Joseph F. Mangano, Daniel R. Wise, Joshua R. Roering; Eroding Cascadia—Sediment and solute transport and landscape denudation in western Oregon and northwestern California. GSA Bulletin doi: https://doi.org/10.1130/B35710.1
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