1996
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-2117.1996.00274.x
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Macrogeomorphic evolution of the post‐Triassic Appalachian mountains determined by deconvolution of the offshore basin sedimentary record

Abstract: A perplexing macrogeomorphic problem is the persistence of topography in mountain ranges that were initially formed by orogenic events hundreds of millions of years old. In this paper, we deconvolve the post‐Triassic macrogeomorphic history of a portion of one of these ranges, the central and northern Appalachians, using a well‐documented offshore isopach sedimentary record of the US Atlantic margin. Topography is an important signature of tectonic, eustatic and/or geomorphic processes that produces changes in… Show more

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Cited by 145 publications
(154 citation statements)
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“…Tectonic uplift of the Appalachian Highlands during the middle Miocene (e.g. Poag et al, 1989;Pazzaglia and Brandon, 1996;Gallen et al, 2013) increased the altitudinal gradient, promoting the expansion of conifers at higher elevations, as characterises the region today (Delcourt et al, 1984). Oboh et al, 1996;2, 10, 11: e.g.…”
Section: Geographical and Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Tectonic uplift of the Appalachian Highlands during the middle Miocene (e.g. Poag et al, 1989;Pazzaglia and Brandon, 1996;Gallen et al, 2013) increased the altitudinal gradient, promoting the expansion of conifers at higher elevations, as characterises the region today (Delcourt et al, 1984). Oboh et al, 1996;2, 10, 11: e.g.…”
Section: Geographical and Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Vice versa, an uplift of mountain ranges could cause a shift in vegetation and a temperature decrease. Poag and Sevon (1989), Pazzaglia and Brandon (1996), and Gallen et al (2013) discuss an uplift phase of the Appalachian Highlands (Fig. 1) during the middle Miocene based on sedimentation rates at the U.S. Atlantic continental margin and on analyses from the Cullasaja River basin (Southern Appalachian Highlands).…”
Section: Clim Pastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Denudation, sediment supply, and the resultant lithospheric flexural response are intrinsically linked, and the analysis of offshore sedimentation coupled with other methodologies such as AFT thermochronology and drainage basin development are valuable approaches for constraining landscape development on PCMs (e.g., Brown et al, 1990;Pazzaglia & Gardner, 1994;Pazzaglia & Brandon, 1996) . However, most studies of the Western Indian margin have tended to focus on either the onshore post-rift denudational history, or the offshore depositional record, with only a few notable exceptions attempting to integrate both methodologies (Gunnell & Fleitout, 1998Gunnell, 2001b).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the past, the only means of doing this has been by serial sediment mass-balance. For example, Pazzaglia and Brandon (1996) compiled sediment thickness measurements in the western Atlantic Ocean to establish the denudation history of the Appalachians over the last 175 Ma, and Collier et al (2000) took advantage of the closed basin of the Gulf of Corinth in Greece to show that erosion rates in the surrounding uplands were much greater during the last glacial maximum than during the Holocene. Mass-balance measurements of erosion rates such as these are potentially very accurate, but are limited to fortuitous geological circumstances where a closed basin is associated with a fixed drainage area, and there exist accurately dated stratigraphic markers that may be used to assign sediment to different time periods.…”
Section: Records Of Erosion Rate Changes Through Timementioning
confidence: 99%