Abstract. Elevated Quaternary sedimentary complexes in the western
foreland of the central mountain ranges of Taiwan are called tablelands.
Their mostly flat surfaces are deeply incised by fluvial processes. The
landforms and the fluvial systems in the Miaoli Tableland are investigated
by high-resolution terrain analyses based on different datasets. Sediments
are described in 51 outcrops and characterized by grain size composition.
The outcrops revealed complete or incomplete sequences of the general scheme from bottom to top: sandy tidal–coastal units overlain by
gravel- and cobble-rich fluvial deposits always with a fine-grained silt-rich
top cover layer influenced by aeolian deposits. All layers are
unconsolidated sediments. Three subtypes of this sequence were identified,
with respect to the occurrence of the fluvial deposits. The relation of
tectonic and erosional processes including the rework of gravels is
discussed. The results reveal a tableland surface much more disaggregated than
previously mapped, suggesting that individual tableland segments represent
remnants of an inferred palaeotopography. The tableland surfaces have been
separated into Sedimentary Highlands (SH-I and SH-II) and Sedimentary Terraces
(ST) by geometrical properties. The Alluvial and Coastal Plains (AL)
represent broad valley bottoms (“box-shaped valleys”) in the dendritic
drainage systems below 150 m and the coastal plains. The landforms and
predominantly the sediment sequences are discussed in the context of the
existing stratigraphical schemes of the Toukoshan Formation and the so far
rarely used Lungkang Formation. The latter is recommended as the
stratigraphical term for the refined subdivision of the uppermost part of
late Quaternary sediments in the Miaoli Tableland.
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