• Science · Jan 2016

    Historical Article

    Repeated catastrophic valley infill following medieval earthquakes in the Nepal Himalaya.

    • Wolfgang Schwanghart, Anne Bernhardt, Amelie Stolle, Philipp Hoelzmann, Basanta R Adhikari, Christoff Andermann, Stefanie Tofelde, Silke Merchel, Georg Rugel, Monique Fort, and Oliver Korup.
    • Institute of Earth and Environmental Science, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany. w.schwanghart@geo.uni-potsdam.de.
    • Science. 2016 Jan 8; 351 (6269): 147-50.

    AbstractGeomorphic footprints of past large Himalayan earthquakes are elusive, although they are urgently needed for gauging and predicting recovery times of seismically perturbed mountain landscapes. We present evidence of catastrophic valley infill following at least three medieval earthquakes in the Nepal Himalaya. Radiocarbon dates from peat beds, plant macrofossils, and humic silts in fine-grained tributary sediments near Pokhara, Nepal's second-largest city, match the timing of nearby M > 8 earthquakes in ~1100, 1255, and 1344 C.E. The upstream dip of tributary valley fills and x-ray fluorescence spectrometry of their provenance rule out local sources. Instead, geomorphic and sedimentary evidence is consistent with catastrophic fluvial aggradation and debris flows that had plugged several tributaries with tens of meters of calcareous sediment from a Higher Himalayan source >60 kilometers away.Copyright © 2016, American Association for the Advancement of Science.

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