Large river systems play a key role in shaping the Earth's landscape. Drainage is strongly affected by climate change and, in turn, rivers contribute to modifying global climate by transferring large amounts of terrestrial inorganic and organic carbon to the ocean, where it remains buried for long periods, thus impacting the carbon cycle (Galy et al., 2007;Zheng et al., 2013). However, because of the complex and interacting roles of tectonic versus climatic forcing on river erosion, the origin and history of large river systems is difficult to constrain (Blum et al., 2018;Craddock et al., 2010;Nie et al., 2015). In Asia, the Yellow River draining the northeastern Tibetan Plateau originated during the Plio-Pleistocene (Z. Wang et al., 2019), often interpreted as an effect of intensified monsoon precipitation and decreased evaporation, resulting in lake spill-over and expansion of the drainage area (Craddock et al., 2010). Plio-Pleistocene uplift of the Tibetan Plateau,