Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Martins, António
Data de Publicação: 2015
Outros Autores: Cunha, Pedro, Paiva, André, Cabral, João, Stokes, Martin
Tipo de documento: Artigo de conferência
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/13575
Resumo: Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma António A. Martins1, Pedro P. Cunha2, André Paiva3, João Cabral4& Martin Stokes5 1 - Centro de Geofísica, Universidade de Évora, Dep. Geociências, Portugal. 2 - MARE – Marine andEnvironmentalSciences Centre, Universidade de Coimbra, Dep. Ciências da Terra, Portugal. 3 - Univ. Coimbra, Departamento de Ciências da Terra, Portugal. 4 - IDL, Lisbon University, Faculty of Sciences, Portugal. 5 - School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth, UK. Since the second half of the 90s of the last century, geomorphological cartography in some reaches ofthe Lower River Tejo (Portugal) was undertaken (Martins, 1999; Cunha, et al., 2008; Martins, et al., 2009, 2010a). Up to six terraces were identified in reach I (Ródão), reach III (Abrantes) and reach IV (V.N.Barquinha–V.F.Xira). A resistant Paleozoic basement proved to be favorable to the development of a narrow valley with almost no terraces. On the contrary, reaches located upstream of resistant local base levels or with a substratum of Cenozoic sediments promoted the valley enlargement and alluvial aggradation. A long-term trend of incision driven by regional uplift, punctuated by episodes of valley enlargement and aggradation promoted byhigh sea-level periods was considered in the formation of the terrace staircase (Martins et al., 2010b). This contributionfocuson the unpublished terrace sequence of reach IV, located just upstream of the modern estuary. Geomorphological mappingat a 25,000 scalereveals an asymmetrical development of the terraces in reach IV.The asymmetric development of the terraces indicates differential uplift. In the Chamusca area up to ca. 30 m of differential upliftis estimated to have occurred after the formation of terrace T3 (minimum age of340 ka). Since the beginning of down-cuttingin the Piacenzian-Gelasian culminant surface (the Tejo River alluvial plain before the incision stage), the geometry of the valley evolved from broadly aggradation surfaces in the older terraces (T1 to T4) to a more narrow and incised valley coeval of the lower and younger terraces (T5 and T6). This featureis widespreadinthe Tejoupstream reaches, up to 200 km fromthe river mouth. This change intime of the valley geometry is insufficiently understood, but the terrace elevations and the available ages (postIR-IRSL for the younger terraces, T6, T5 and T4, Cunha et al., 2012; ESR for the T4 to T1, Rosina et al., 2014) suggests longer periods of valley enlargement and aggradation for the older terraces, compared with the younger terraces possibly due to the acceleration of uplift.The cartography also evidences the Holocene alluvial plain, and a late Pleistocene aeolian sand unit only represented in the eastern margin of the valley.
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spelling Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 MaTejo reach IVterrace staircasedifferential upliftagesGeomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma António A. Martins1, Pedro P. Cunha2, André Paiva3, João Cabral4& Martin Stokes5 1 - Centro de Geofísica, Universidade de Évora, Dep. Geociências, Portugal. 2 - MARE – Marine andEnvironmentalSciences Centre, Universidade de Coimbra, Dep. Ciências da Terra, Portugal. 3 - Univ. Coimbra, Departamento de Ciências da Terra, Portugal. 4 - IDL, Lisbon University, Faculty of Sciences, Portugal. 5 - School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth, UK. Since the second half of the 90s of the last century, geomorphological cartography in some reaches ofthe Lower River Tejo (Portugal) was undertaken (Martins, 1999; Cunha, et al., 2008; Martins, et al., 2009, 2010a). Up to six terraces were identified in reach I (Ródão), reach III (Abrantes) and reach IV (V.N.Barquinha–V.F.Xira). A resistant Paleozoic basement proved to be favorable to the development of a narrow valley with almost no terraces. On the contrary, reaches located upstream of resistant local base levels or with a substratum of Cenozoic sediments promoted the valley enlargement and alluvial aggradation. A long-term trend of incision driven by regional uplift, punctuated by episodes of valley enlargement and aggradation promoted byhigh sea-level periods was considered in the formation of the terrace staircase (Martins et al., 2010b). This contributionfocuson the unpublished terrace sequence of reach IV, located just upstream of the modern estuary. Geomorphological mappingat a 25,000 scalereveals an asymmetrical development of the terraces in reach IV.The asymmetric development of the terraces indicates differential uplift. In the Chamusca area up to ca. 30 m of differential upliftis estimated to have occurred after the formation of terrace T3 (minimum age of340 ka). Since the beginning of down-cuttingin the Piacenzian-Gelasian culminant surface (the Tejo River alluvial plain before the incision stage), the geometry of the valley evolved from broadly aggradation surfaces in the older terraces (T1 to T4) to a more narrow and incised valley coeval of the lower and younger terraces (T5 and T6). This featureis widespreadinthe Tejoupstream reaches, up to 200 km fromthe river mouth. This change intime of the valley geometry is insufficiently understood, but the terrace elevations and the available ages (postIR-IRSL for the younger terraces, T6, T5 and T4, Cunha et al., 2012; ESR for the T4 to T1, Rosina et al., 2014) suggests longer periods of valley enlargement and aggradation for the older terraces, compared with the younger terraces possibly due to the acceleration of uplift.The cartography also evidences the Holocene alluvial plain, and a late Pleistocene aeolian sand unit only represented in the eastern margin of the valley.F. Díaz del Olmo & D. Faust2015-03-25T10:28:43Z2015-03-252015-03-13T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjecthttp://hdl.handle.net/10174/13575http://hdl.handle.net/10174/13575engsimnaonaoaam@uevora.ptpcunha@dct.uc.ptandrealmeidapaiva@gmail.comjcabral@fc.ul.ptM.Stokes@plymouth.ac.uk394Martins, AntónioCunha, PedroPaiva, AndréCabral, JoãoStokes, Martininfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2024-01-03T18:59:15Zoai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/13575Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-20T01:07:02.408069Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
title Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
spellingShingle Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
Martins, António
Tejo reach IV
terrace staircase
differential uplift
ages
title_short Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
title_full Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
title_fullStr Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
title_full_unstemmed Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
title_sort Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma
author Martins, António
author_facet Martins, António
Cunha, Pedro
Paiva, André
Cabral, João
Stokes, Martin
author_role author
author2 Cunha, Pedro
Paiva, André
Cabral, João
Stokes, Martin
author2_role author
author
author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Martins, António
Cunha, Pedro
Paiva, André
Cabral, João
Stokes, Martin
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Tejo reach IV
terrace staircase
differential uplift
ages
topic Tejo reach IV
terrace staircase
differential uplift
ages
description Geomorphological cartography on the River Tejo lower valley –implications for interpretation of landscape and environmental changes of western Iberia inthe last 2 Ma António A. Martins1, Pedro P. Cunha2, André Paiva3, João Cabral4& Martin Stokes5 1 - Centro de Geofísica, Universidade de Évora, Dep. Geociências, Portugal. 2 - MARE – Marine andEnvironmentalSciences Centre, Universidade de Coimbra, Dep. Ciências da Terra, Portugal. 3 - Univ. Coimbra, Departamento de Ciências da Terra, Portugal. 4 - IDL, Lisbon University, Faculty of Sciences, Portugal. 5 - School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Plymouth, UK. Since the second half of the 90s of the last century, geomorphological cartography in some reaches ofthe Lower River Tejo (Portugal) was undertaken (Martins, 1999; Cunha, et al., 2008; Martins, et al., 2009, 2010a). Up to six terraces were identified in reach I (Ródão), reach III (Abrantes) and reach IV (V.N.Barquinha–V.F.Xira). A resistant Paleozoic basement proved to be favorable to the development of a narrow valley with almost no terraces. On the contrary, reaches located upstream of resistant local base levels or with a substratum of Cenozoic sediments promoted the valley enlargement and alluvial aggradation. A long-term trend of incision driven by regional uplift, punctuated by episodes of valley enlargement and aggradation promoted byhigh sea-level periods was considered in the formation of the terrace staircase (Martins et al., 2010b). This contributionfocuson the unpublished terrace sequence of reach IV, located just upstream of the modern estuary. Geomorphological mappingat a 25,000 scalereveals an asymmetrical development of the terraces in reach IV.The asymmetric development of the terraces indicates differential uplift. In the Chamusca area up to ca. 30 m of differential upliftis estimated to have occurred after the formation of terrace T3 (minimum age of340 ka). Since the beginning of down-cuttingin the Piacenzian-Gelasian culminant surface (the Tejo River alluvial plain before the incision stage), the geometry of the valley evolved from broadly aggradation surfaces in the older terraces (T1 to T4) to a more narrow and incised valley coeval of the lower and younger terraces (T5 and T6). This featureis widespreadinthe Tejoupstream reaches, up to 200 km fromthe river mouth. This change intime of the valley geometry is insufficiently understood, but the terrace elevations and the available ages (postIR-IRSL for the younger terraces, T6, T5 and T4, Cunha et al., 2012; ESR for the T4 to T1, Rosina et al., 2014) suggests longer periods of valley enlargement and aggradation for the older terraces, compared with the younger terraces possibly due to the acceleration of uplift.The cartography also evidences the Holocene alluvial plain, and a late Pleistocene aeolian sand unit only represented in the eastern margin of the valley.
publishDate 2015
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2015-03-25T10:28:43Z
2015-03-25
2015-03-13T00:00:00Z
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aam@uevora.pt
pcunha@dct.uc.pt
andrealmeidapaiva@gmail.com
jcabral@fc.ul.pt
M.Stokes@plymouth.ac.uk
394
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dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv F. Díaz del Olmo & D. Faust
publisher.none.fl_str_mv F. Díaz del Olmo & D. Faust
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