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Published June 2014 | public
Journal Article

The contribution of mountains to global denudation

Abstract

The hypothesis that mountains influence global climate through links among rock uplift, physical and chemical denudation, and the carbon cycle remains vigorously debated. We address the contribution of mountains to global denudation with an empirical model that predicts that >50% of the total denudation and 40% of the chemical denudation occur on the steepest ∼10% of Earth's terrestrial surface. These findings contrast with those from a recent study that suggested global-scale denudation occurs primarily on gently sloping terrain, but did not account for the influence of digital elevation model resolution on modeled denudation rates. Comparison of calculated denudation rates against the sum of measured sediment and solute yields from 265 watersheds indicates a positive correlation (R^2 = 0.44) with order-of-magnitude variability reflecting, among other things, the effects of dams and agriculture. In addition, ratios of measured river yield to modeled denudation rate decline as catchment area increases due to progressively greater sediment storage with increasing drainage area. Our results support the conclusion that the small mountainous fraction of Earth's surface dominates global denudation and the flux of sediment and solutes to oceans.

Additional Information

© 2014 Geological Society of America. Manuscript received 20 September 2013. Revised manuscript received 23 March 2014. Manuscript accepted 25 March 2014. First published online April 10, 2014. We thank the Puget Sound Lidar Consortium, the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries, the National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping, the National Science Foundation OpenTopography Facility, and viewfinderpanoramas.org for providing topographic data. We also thank Josh West for insightful discussion and Alex Densmore, Kelin Whipple, and an anonymous reviewer for comments that greatly improved the manuscript. Larsen's work on this project was supported by NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship NNX09AN90H and the California Institute of Technology Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023