Title: Intermission
1Intermission
2Leos section
- Macro-geomorphological evidence
- Long term denudational history from
thermochronometric evidence
3Macro-geomorphological evidence
- High relief concentrated on retro-wedge.
- At 120km N of tip
- height 1350m
- Width 87 4 km
PRO
RETRO
From Fuller et al., 2003
4- (From Willett et al., 2002)
5Macro-geomorphological evidence
- High relief concentrated on retro-wedge.
- At 120km N of tip
- height 1350m
- Width 87 4 km
PRO
RETRO
From Fuller et al., 2003
6- In spite of the increasing age of the collision
to the north, the average elevation and width of
the Central Range does not increase along its
northern two-thirds. This has led to the proposal
that the range is in topographic steady-state.
(Willett et al., 2001)
7Long term denudational history from
thermochronometric evidence
- Which thermochronometers were used?
- Apatite fission-track
- Zircon fission-track
8Zircon fission-track data
From Willett et al., 2002
- gt 120 km north of Taiwans southern tip
- Reset zircon ages
- lt 40 km north of Taiwans southern tip
- No reset zircon ages
- Southern tip recently exhumed
9Zircon and Apatite fission-track data
- Apatite reset zone extends further than Zircon
reset zone. - Willett and Brandon (2002) state that nested
reset zones, indicate exhumational steady state
From Willett et al., 2003
10Zircon and Apatite fission-track data
- Apatite reset zone extends further than Zircon
reset zone. - Willett and Brandon (2002) state that nested
reset zones, indicate exhumational steady state
From Willett et al., 2003
11Long term denudational history from
thermochronometric evidence
- Thermochronometers suggest that Taiwan northern
part is in exhumational steady state. - Southern (120 km) is too recent exhumed to give
evidence of long term denudation.
12Conclusions
- Seismicity
- ?
- Climatic factors
- ?
- Geomorphic processes?
- Marco-geomorphology
- Denudational history from thermochronometry
13Any Questions?