Piggyback basins developed at the mountain fronts of collisional orogens can act as important, and transient, sediment stores along major river systems. It is not clear, however, how the storage and release of sediment in piggyback basins affects the sediment flux and evolution of downstream river reaches. Here, we investigate the timing and volumes of sediment storage and release in the Dehra Dun, a piggyback basin developed along the Himalayan mountain front in northwestern India. Based on OSL dating, we show evidence for three major phases of aggradation in the dun, bracketed at ca. 41–33 ka, 34–21 ka and 23–10 ka, each accompanied by progradation of sediment fans into the dun. Each of these phases was followed by backfilling and (appare...
In the Indo–Gangetic plains (IGP), the inter–basinal area between the Ganga in east and the Indus in...
Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major con...
Rivers sourced in the Himalayan mountains support more than 10% of the global population, where the...
The large Himalayan rivers of the Indo-Gangetic Plain support 10% of the world’s population. Most o...
Rivers draining the semiarid Transhimalayan Ranges at the western Tibetan Plateau margin underwent a...
How well do deep-sea sedimentary archives track erosion in upland sources, driven by climatic change...
Three main rivers—the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna—coalesce in the Bengal basin to form the world...
Rapidly uplifting Himalaya contributes a huge sediment load that governs the morphological character...
Transient storage and erosion of valley fills, or sediment buffering, is a fundamental but poorly qu...
Detailed pedofacies characterization along-with lithofacies investigations of the Mio-Pleistocene Si...
International audienceUnderstanding the dynamics of sediment fluxes is a key issue to constrain mode...
Accurately quantifying sediment fluxes in large rivers draining tectonically active landscapes is co...
Deciphering the response of sediment routing systems to climatic forcing is fundamental for understa...
International audienceIODP Expedition 354 in the Bengal fan [1] generated a comprehensive record of ...
Rivers draining the semiarid Transhimalayan Ranges along the western Tibetan Plateau margin underwen...
In the Indo–Gangetic plains (IGP), the inter–basinal area between the Ganga in east and the Indus in...
Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major con...
Rivers sourced in the Himalayan mountains support more than 10% of the global population, where the...
The large Himalayan rivers of the Indo-Gangetic Plain support 10% of the world’s population. Most o...
Rivers draining the semiarid Transhimalayan Ranges at the western Tibetan Plateau margin underwent a...
How well do deep-sea sedimentary archives track erosion in upland sources, driven by climatic change...
Three main rivers—the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna—coalesce in the Bengal basin to form the world...
Rapidly uplifting Himalaya contributes a huge sediment load that governs the morphological character...
Transient storage and erosion of valley fills, or sediment buffering, is a fundamental but poorly qu...
Detailed pedofacies characterization along-with lithofacies investigations of the Mio-Pleistocene Si...
International audienceUnderstanding the dynamics of sediment fluxes is a key issue to constrain mode...
Accurately quantifying sediment fluxes in large rivers draining tectonically active landscapes is co...
Deciphering the response of sediment routing systems to climatic forcing is fundamental for understa...
International audienceIODP Expedition 354 in the Bengal fan [1] generated a comprehensive record of ...
Rivers draining the semiarid Transhimalayan Ranges along the western Tibetan Plateau margin underwen...
In the Indo–Gangetic plains (IGP), the inter–basinal area between the Ganga in east and the Indus in...
Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major con...
Rivers sourced in the Himalayan mountains support more than 10% of the global population, where the...