News Release
Rerouting of Major Rivers in Asia Provides Clues to Mountains of the Past
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Media Relations Office
December 23, 2005
(508) 289-3340
Shelley Dawicki
Scientists have long recognized that the collision of the earth’s great
crustal plates generates mountain ranges and other features of the
Earth’s surface. Yet the link between mountain uplift and river
drainage patterns has been uncertain. Now scientists have used
laboratory techniques and sediment cores from the ocean to help explain
the how rivers have changed course over millions of years.
In a report published in the December 15 issue of Nature, scientists
Peter Clift of the University of Aberdeen in the United Kingdom and
Jerzy Blusztajn of the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
reconstructed the erosional discharge from the Indus River over the
past 30 million years and found that the source of those sediments
changed five million years ago. Until then, Indus River sediments were
produced by erosion of mountains to the north of the collision zone
between India and Asia, but five million years ago much more sediment
starting coming from the southern Himalayas, part of the deformed
Indian plate.
Clift and Blusztajn believe the change is caused by a rerouting of the
major rivers of the Punjab region into the Indus River, where they flow
into the Arabian Sea west of India. Previously these rivers flowed east
and joined the Ganges River before reaching the Bay of Bengal, east of
India.
The erosional record in the Arabian Sea is at the center of debates
concerning the nature of continent-ocean interactions, and how climate,
tectonic activity and erosion are linked. In order to interpret this
record, scientists need to understand what sediment is being delivered
by the modern Indus River to the coast and transported to
the deep sea.
The researchers reconstructed the long-term discharge from the Indus
River using both new and previously published data to estimate
continental erosion rates. Although some sediment from the rivers stays
onshore, about two thirds of the sediment is preserved offshore. Using
a series of sediment samples from scientific and industrial drill sites
across the Arabian Sea, the researchers reconstructed changing
continental erosion rates through time. The technique may enable
scientists to eventually date the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau
By studying sediments accumulated in the Arabian Sea, the researchers
found strong evidence for a significant change in the Himalayan river
systems in the recent geologic past. The sediment in the Arabian Sea
forms one of the largest areas of sediment deposition in the oceans and
is an important repository of information on the uplift and erosion of
the western Himalaya.
“This is the first time such a major sediment capture event has been
dated,” said Blusztajn, a researcher in the WHOI Geology and Geophysics
Department. “ It has been proposed than such huge events occurred in
East Asia, but so far the ages of the capture events there remain
unknown. The new isotope stratigraphy provides strong evidence for a
major change in the geometry of the western Himalayan river system
after five million years ago, probably caused by a change in the
mountains.”
Earlier studies by Clift, a visiting scientist at WHOI, and others have
shown differences in “isotopic fingerprints” between ancient and
modern Indus River sediments.
The new findings suggest the ancient Punjabi rivers were connected to
the Ganges and not the Indus River, and that the rivers were diverted
or rerouted from their original southeasterly flow by the uplift of
mountain ranges in modern day Pakistan. The majority of material
contributing to the Indus River now is coming from four large rivers in
the Punjab: the Sutlej, Ravi, Chennab and Jellum rivers, forming the
“bread basket” of northern India and Pakistan.
“This study highlights the need to account for sediment capture events
like this in interpreting erosion records from the marine environment,”
Blusztajn said. “Studying modern river sediments and comparing them
with marine sediment allows the volume and composition of inputs from
different sources to be quantified. If the marine sedimentation process
can be related to the modern mountains and drainage system, we may be
able to use ancient sediments to reconstruct what the mountains looked
like in the geologic past.”
Originally published: December 23, 2005

