info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Sediment budget in the Ucayali River basin, an Andean tributary of the Amazon River
Fecha
2014-01Autor
Santini, W.
Martinez, J.-M.
Espinoza-Villar, R.
Cochonneau, G.
Vauchel, P.
Moquet, J.S.
Baby, P.
Espinoza, J.C.
Lavado-Casimiro, W.
Carranza, Jorge
Guyot, J.L.
Resumen
Formation of mountain ranges results from complex coupling between lithospheric deformation, mechanisms linked to subduction and surface processes: weathering, erosion, and climate. Today, erosion of the eastern Andean cordillera and sub-Andean foothills supplies over 99% of the sediment load passing through the Amazon Basin. Denudation rates in the upper Ucayali basin are rapid, favoured by a marked seasonality in this region and extreme precipitation cells above sedimentary strata, uplifted during Neogene times by a still active sub-Andean tectonic thrust. Around 40% of those sediments are trapped in the Ucayali retro-foreland basin system. Recent advances in remote sensing for Amazonian large rivers now allow us to complete the ground hydrological data. In this work, we propose a first estimation of the erosion and sedimentation budget of the Ucayali River catchment, based on spatial and conventional HYBAM Observatory network. Copyright