Group A, Poster #115, Earthquake Geology
Late Quaternary Erosion Rates in the San Gorgonio Pass: Insights From Thermoluminescence Thermochronology
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Poster Presentation
2025 SCEC Annual Meeting, Poster #115, SCEC Contribution #14852 VIEW PDF
d climatic signals, whereas millennial-scale ¹⁰Be estimates can be biased by stochastic landsliding in steep terrain or by relict catchment topography. Here, we apply thermoluminescence (TL) thermochronology—an ultra-low-temperature thermochronometer—to derive erosion rates at individual bedrock outcrops. We resolve erosion rates at timescales of 10 to 100 ka, thereby bridging the temporal gap between cosmogenic 10Be (103 years) and AHe (106 years). We report erosion rates for outcrops on either side of the Mill Creek, Mission Creek, Galena Peak, and San Bernardino strands of the San Andreas Fault in the southern San Bernardino Mountains to test whether there is differential erosion across these fault strands due to tectonic uplift, or whether erosion rates relate to fault strand proximity or other topographic metrics. We plot these erosion rates against various topographic metrics including hillslope angle, local relief, elevation, curvature, distance to fault, and precipitation from the 30-year PRISM dataset to investigate potential controls. We find that erosion rates are positively correlated with hillslope angle and topographic relief. Erosion rates also increase with negative concavity (ex. valley bottoms). Samples exhibit higher erosion rates closer to the Galena Peak, western Mill Creek, and San Bernardino strands of the San Andreas Fault, consistent with either ongoing tectonic uplift or enhanced erosion due to inherited rock damage from past activity. Near the Mill Creek catchment headwall (the “Mill Creek Jumpoff”), we observe an upstream-migrating knickpoint, consistent with fluvial adjustment to base-level fall due to tectonic reorganisation. Our results demonstrate the utility of TL-derived erosion rates in tectonically complex settings.
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