EGU24-13586, updated on 09 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-13586
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

In-situ Weathering of Alluvial Sediments in the Southern Central Andes Recorded by Ground- and Space-Based Hyperspectral Reflectance

Henry Crawford1, Mitch D'Arcy1, Andreas Ruby2, Taylor Schildgen2,3, and Ana Laura Martínez López4
Henry Crawford et al.
  • 1Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Sciences, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada (hcrawford@eoas.ubc.ca)
  • 2GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany
  • 3Institute for Geosciences, Potsdam University, Potsdam, Germany
  • 4Departamento de Geología, Universidad Nacional de Salta, Salta, Argentina

Alluvial fans comprise abandoned sedimentary surfaces undergoing physical and chemical weathering. While weathering pathways and kinetics have been described over seconds to decades, few field-based studies have quantified these processes in alluvial deposits over geologic timespans. We examine 14 alluvial-fan surfaces flanking the Sierra del Aconquija, southern Central Andes, which have ages between 3 and 320 ka as determined by cosmogenic nuclide exposure dating. These fans present an opportunity to study the evolution of alluvial sediments across late-Quaternary timescales; including silicate weathering pathways, products, rates, and sensitivity to known past climate changes. We use space- and ground-based hyperspectral reflectance measurements to characterize surface mineralogy, and we test whether in-situ weathering records signals of landform age and regional climatic history. We collect fan-surface reflectance using both a handheld spectroradiometer and the PRISMA hyperspectral satellite sensor. In both datasets, bridging several orders of magnitude in spatial scale, we detect spectral features indicative of changing quantities of primary minerals, clays, and iron oxides. These patterns suggest a gradual increase in absolute weathering with surface age, but at progressively slower rates over time. Superimposed on the long-term weathering kinetics, secondary minerals are generated in amounts and at rates that correlate systematically with ~23 kyr precessional cycles and millennial-scale climate perturbations.  We interpret that these alluvial fans are sensitive archives of past weathering, which was more pronounced during episodes of wetter and warmer climate. Furthermore, the surface signals are corroborated by the downward accumulation of iron oxide, as shown in soil profiles from four alluvial fan units which were spectrally scanned from the surface to below the weathering front. Our findings highlight the geomorphological applications of hyperspectral data for (i) quantifying weathering processes over 1-100 kyr timescales; (ii) developing novel chronometers for alluvial sediments; and (iii) recovering new palaeoclimate signals from terrestrial sedimentary archives.

How to cite: Crawford, H., D'Arcy, M., Ruby, A., Schildgen, T., and Martínez López, A. L.: In-situ Weathering of Alluvial Sediments in the Southern Central Andes Recorded by Ground- and Space-Based Hyperspectral Reflectance, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-13586, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-13586, 2024.

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