“…Some efforts have centred on connecting landscape surface kinematics to stratal preservation (Paola & Borgman, 1991;Castelltort & Van Den Driessche, 2003;Jerolmack & Mohrig, 2005;Jerolmack & Paola, 2010;Hajek & Wolinsky, 2012;Ganti et al, 2013;Ganti et al, 2014;Reesink et al, 2015;Romans et al, 2016;Ganti et al, 2020;Straub et al, 2020) and a number of these studies have focused on Late Cretaceous fluvial strata in central Utah Trower et al, 2018;Ganti et al, 2019a). Meanwhile, other quantitative work has applied fluid and sediment transport models to stratigraphic field data, with an overarching goal of constraining the characteristics of catchments, regional systems or entire fluvial landscapes in the geological past (Ganti et al, 2019b;Lapôtre et al, 2019), or even on other planetary bodies (Lamb et al, 2012;Buhler et al, 2014;Hayden et al, 2019;Lapôtre et al, 2019). This includes using quantitative palaeohydrological tools to reconstruct water and sediment discharges within mass balance frameworks (Holbrook & Wanas, 2014;Lin & Bhattacharya, 2017;Sharma et al, 2017), decipher local palaeogeographies (Bhattacharyya et al, 2015;Li et al, 2018), characterise pre-vegetation rivers (Ganti et al, 2019b), and reconstruct fluvial response to climatic perturbations for well-preserved fluvial strata straddling events such as the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) (Foreman et al, 2012;Foreman, 2014;Colombera et al, 2017;Chen et al, 2018;Duller et al, 2019).…”