Resumo (PT):
Abstract (EN):
In western Iberia, mechanisms that can explain the transition from endorheic to exorheic continental-scale
drainage reorganization are foreland basin overspill, headwards erosion and capture by an Atlantic river, or a
combination of both. To explore these, we have investigated the Portuguese sector of the Douro River, the locus
of drainage reorganization. The Douro River is routed downstream through the weak sedimentary infill of the
Douro Cenozoic Basin, after which the river cuts down through harder granitic and metamorphic rocks crossed
by active fault zones, before reaching the Atlantic coast. We investigated the drainage reorganization using an
integrated approach that combined remote sensing, field survey and geochronology, applied to
Pliocene–Quaternary fluvial sediments and landforms. The older drainage record is documented by a series of
high and intermediate landform levels comprising: (1) a high level (1000–500ma.s.l.) faulted regional fluvial
erosion surface, the North Iberian Meseta planation surface and the Mountains and Plateaus of Northern
Portugal, recording the endorheic drainage of the Douro Cenozoic Basin; (2) a first inset level at 650–600ma.s.l.,
comprising a broad fluvial surface developed onto a large ENE–WSW depression, interpreted as recording the
initiation of the continental scale reorganization; and (3) an inset fluvial surface at 550–400ma.s.l., corresponding
to the establishment of the exorheic ancestral Douro valley. The younger drainage record comprises an
entrenched fluvial strath terrace sequence of up to 9 levels (T9=oldest), positioned at 246–242m above the
modern river base; T1=youngest, positioned at +17–13 m. Levels T1 and T3 display localized fault offsets. The
three lowest terrace levels (T3–T1) were dated using optically stimulated luminescence techniques with results
ranging from>230–360 ka (T3), through 57 ka (T2) to 39–12 ka (T1). Fluvial incision rates of the younger
terraces were quantified and temporally extrapolated to model the ages of the intermediate to high elevation
levels of the early drainage record. Integration of incision data informs on the probable timing of the drainage
reorganization and the initial adjustment, ~3.7–1.8 Ma. This was followed by acceleration of incision, producing
the entrenched river terrace sequence developed via spatial and temporal variations in rock strength, uplift and
cyclic cool-climate variability as the river adjusted to the Atlantic base level.
Language:
English
Type (Professor's evaluation):
Scientific
No. of pages:
20