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Published May 2014 | public
Journal Article

Ice dams, outburst floods, and glacial incision at the western margin of the Tibetan Plateau: A >100 k.y. chronology from the Shyok Valley, Karakoram

Abstract

Some of the largest and most erosive floods on Earth result from the failure of glacial dams. While potentially cataclysmic ice dams are recognized to have repeatedly formed along ice-sheet margins, much less is known about the frequency and longevity of ice dams caused by mountain glaciers, and their impact on landscape evolution. Here we present field observations and results from cosmogenic nuclide dating that allow reconstructing a >100-k.y.-long history of glacial damming in the Shyok Valley, eastern Karakoram (South Asia). Our field observations provide evidence that Asia's second-longest glacier, the Siachen, once extended for over 180 km and blocked the Shyok River during the penultimate glacial period, leading to upstream deposition of a more than 400-m-thick fluvio-lacustrine valley fill. ^(10)Be-depth profile modeling indicates that glacial damming ended with the onset of the Eemian interglacial and that the Shyok River subsequently incised the valley fill at an average rate of ∼4–7 m k.y.^(–1). Comparison with contemporary ice-dammed lakes in the Karakoram and elsewhere suggests recurring outburst floods during the aggradation period, while over 25 cycles of fining-upward lake deposits within the valley fill indicate impounding of floods from farther upstream. Despite prolonged damming, the net effect of this and probably earlier damming episodes by the Siachen Glacier is dominated by glacial erosion in excess of fluvial incision, as evidenced by a pronounced overdeepening that follows the glaciated valley reach. Strikingly similar overdeepened valleys at all major confluences of the Shyok and Indus Rivers with Karakoram tributaries indicate that glacial dams and subsequent outburst floods have been widespread and frequent in this region during the Quaternary. Our study suggests that the interaction of Karakoram glaciers with the Shyok and Indus Rivers promoted valley incision and headward erosion into the western margin of the Tibetan Plateau.

Additional Information

© 2014 Geological Society of America. Received 12 June 2013. Revision received 5 November 2013. Accepted 12 December 2013. First published online February 13, 2014. This research was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF, PROGRESS). D.S. was supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. H.M. was supported by DFG grant KO3937/2. P.E. was supported by DFG graduate school GK1364 (DFG grant STR373/21-2). We thank R. Thiede and T. Tsering Lonpo for support during fieldwork, S. Mischke for analyzing the fossil content of our lake samples, J. Bloethe for testing OSL dating on the lake sediments, T. Schildgen, D. Montgomery, J. Dortch, and D. Egholm for valuable comments on an earlier draft, B. Hallet for stimulating discussions, and D. Burbank for a constructive review that helped improve the manuscript.

Additional details

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