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Título : Tracking spatial variation in river load from Andean highlands to inter-Andean valleys
Autor: Tenorio , Gustavo E.
Vanacker, Veerle
Campforts, Benjamin
Alvarez, Lenin
Zhiminaicela Saquinaula, Cesar Santiago
Vercruysse, Kim
Molina Verdugo, Armando
Govers, Gerard
Correspondencia: Tenorio , Gustavo E., gus.tenoriopoma@kuleuven.be
Palabras clave : Andes
Chemical Weathering
Páramo
Physical Erosion
Área de conocimiento FRASCATI amplio: 1. Ciencias Naturales y Exactas
Área de conocimiento FRASCATI detallado: 1.5.6 Geología
Área de conocimiento FRASCATI específico: 1.5 Ciencias de la Tierra y el Ambiente
Área de conocimiento UNESCO amplio: 05 - Ciencias Físicas, Ciencias Naturales, Matemáticas y Estadísticas
ÁArea de conocimiento UNESCO detallado: 0532 - Ciencias de la Tierra
Área de conocimiento UNESCO específico: 053 - Ciencias Físicas
Fecha de publicación : 2018
Fecha de fin de embargo: 21-feb-2050
Volumen: volumen 308, número 0
Fuente: Geomorphology
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2018.02.009
Tipo: ARTÍCULO
Abstract: 
Mountains play an important role in the denudation of continents and transfer erosion and weathering products to lowlands and oceans. The rates at which erosion and weathering processes take place in mountain regions have a substantial impact on the morphology and biogeochemistry of downstream reaches and lowlands. The controlling factors of physical erosion and chemical weathering and the coupling between the two processes are not yet fully understood. In this study, we report physical erosion and chemical weathering rates for five Andean catchments located in the southern Ecuadorian Andes and investigate their mutual interaction. During a 4-year monitoring period, we sampled river water at biweekly intervals, and we analyzed water samples for major ions and suspended solids. We derived the total annual dissolved, suspended sediment, and ionic loads from the flow frequency curves and adjusted rating curves and used the dissolved and suspended sediment yields as proxies for chemical weathering and erosion rates. In the 4-year period of monitoring, chemical weathering exceeds physical erosion in the high Andean catchments. Whereas physical erosion rates do not exceed 30 t km−2 y−1 in the relict glaciated morphology, chemical weathering rates range between 22 and 59 t km−2 y−1 . The variation in chemical weathering is primarily controlled by intrinsic differences in bedrock lithology. Land use has no discernible impact on the weathering rate but leads to a small increase in base cation concentrations because of fertilizer leaching in surface water. When extending our analysis with published data on dissolved and suspended sediment yields from the northern and central Andes, we observe that the river load composition strongly changes in the downstream direction, indicating large heterogeneity of weathering processes and rates within large Andean basins.
Resumen : 
Mountains play an important role in the denudation of continents and transfer erosion and weathering products to lowlands and oceans. The rates at which erosion and weathering processes take place in mountain regions have a substantial impact on the morphology and biogeochemistry of downstream reaches and lowlands. The controlling factors of physical erosion and chemical weathering and the coupling between the two processes are not yet fully understood. In this study, we report physical erosion and chemical weathering rates for five Andean catchments located in the southern Ecuadorian Andes and investigate their mutual interaction. During a 4-year monitoring period, we sampled river water at biweekly intervals, and we analyzed water samples for major ions and suspended solids. We derived the total annual dissolved, suspended sediment, and ionic loads from the flow frequency curves and adjusted rating curves and used the dissolved and suspended sediment yields as proxies for chemical weathering and erosion rates. In the 4-year period of monitoring, chemical weathering exceeds physical erosion in the high Andean catchments. Whereas physical erosion rates do not exceed 30 t km−2 y−1 in the relict glaciated morphology, chemical weathering rates range between 22 and 59 t km−2 y−1 . The variation in chemical weathering is primarily controlled by intrinsic differences in bedrock lithology. Land use has no discernible impact on the weathering rate but leads to a small increase in base cation concentrations because of fertilizer leaching in surface water. When extending our analysis with published data on dissolved and suspended sediment yields from the northern and central Andes, we observe that the river load composition strongly changes in the downstream direction, indicating large heterogeneity of weathering processes and rates within large Andean basins.
URI : https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85044384676&origin=inward
URI Fuente: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0169555X18300576
ISSN : 0169555X
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