“…A large proportion of recent research documenting bedrock river incision and channel-hillslope linkages has focused on large rivers flowing through seismically active orogens experiencing rapid rock uplift and very high-magnitude, monsoonal or typhoon-driven storm events, such as in the Himalaya or Taiwan. These large, sediment-laden bedrock rivers are able to incise bedrock rapidly, at rates that are generally understood to keep pace with rock uplift (Southern Alps, Adams, 1980Adams, , 1985the Indus, Burbank et al, 1996;Hancock et al, 1998;Taiwan, Hartshorn et al, 2002;Schaller et al, 2005), and to maintain valley sides at the critical slope angle for rock failure (Burbank et al, 1996;Hovius et al, 1997;Hovius, 2000;Dietrich et al, 2003;Roering et al, 1999Roering et al, , 2005 (Figure 12). In numerical models, steadystate topography is attained in a time that scales with the uplift rate, width of the mountain belt and physical parameters of the erosion model (Kooi and Beaumont, 1996;Willett et al, 2001).…”