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The ~2,000-km-long Central Range of New Guinea is a hotspot of modern carbon sequestration due to the chemical weathering of igneous rocks with steep topography in the warm wet tropics. These high mountains formed in a collision between the Australian plate and ophiolite-bearing volcanic arc terranes, but poor resolution of the uplift and exhumation history has precluded assessments of the impact on global climate change. Here, we develop a palinspastic reconstruction of the Central Range orogen with existing surface geological constraints and seismic data to generate time–temperature paths and estimate volumes of eroded material. New (U-Th)/He thermochronology data reveal rapid uplift and regional denudation between 10 and 6 Mya. Erosion fluxes from the palinspastic reconstruction, calibrated for time with the thermochronological data, were used as input to a coupled global climate and weathering model. This model estimates 0.6 to 1.2 °C of cooling associated with the Late Miocene rise of New Guinea due to increased silicate weathering alone, and this CO2sink continues to the present. Our data and modeling experiments support the hypothesis that tropical arc-continent collision and the rise of New Guinea contributed to Neogene cooling due to increased silicate weathering.more » « less
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Abstract. Here we examine the landscape of New Zealand'sMarlborough Fault System (MFS), where the Australian and Pacific plates obliquelycollide, in order to study landscape evolution and the controls on fluvialpatterns at a long-lived plate boundary. We present maps of drainageanomalies and channel steepness, as well as an analysis of the plan-vieworientations of rivers and faults, and we find abundant evidence ofstructurally controlled drainage that we relate to a history of drainagecapture and rearrangement in response to mountain-building and strike-slipfaulting. Despite clear evidence of recent rearrangement of the western MFSdrainage network, rivers in this region still flow parallel to older faults,rather than along orthogonal traces of younger, active strike-slip faults.Such drainage patterns emphasize the importance of river entrenchment,showing that once rivers establish themselves along a structural grain,their capture or avulsion becomes difficult, even when exposed to newweakening and tectonic strain. Continued flow along older faults may alsoindicate that the younger faults have not yet generated a fault damage zonewith the material weakening needed to focus erosion and reorient rivers.Channel steepness is highest in the eastern MFS, in a zone centered on theKaikōura ranges, including within the low-elevation valleys of main stemrivers and at tributaries near the coast. This pattern is consistent with anincrease in rock uplift rate toward a subduction front that is locked on itssouthern end. Based on these results and a wealth of previous geologicstudies, we propose two broad stages of landscape evolution over the last 25 million years of orogenesis. In the eastern MFS, Miocene folding above blindthrust faults generated prominent mountain peaks and formed major transverserivers early in the plate collision history. A transition to Pliocenedextral strike-slip faulting and widespread uplift led to cycles of riverchannel offset, deflection and capture of tributaries draining across activefaults, and headward erosion and captures by major transverse rivers withinthe western MFS. We predict a similar landscape will evolve south of theHope Fault, as the locus of plate boundary deformation migrates southwardinto this region with time.more » « less
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