Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6446886 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2007 | 25 Pages |
Abstract
The Quaternary drainage pattern evolution of the Great Plain, with a strong tectonic control, is discussed in detail. Rivers originating from the uplifting marginal areas were drawn towards the subsiding depressions which served as local base level. Changes in subsidence rates in space and time throughout the Quaternary resulted in the evolution of a complex drainage pattern. A special emphasis is placed on the Late Pleistocene-Holocene development of the Middle-Tisza region and the Körös basin, where the Berettyó-Körös Rivers form an eastern tributary system of the Tisza River. A comparative evaluation of these two areas is especially relevant, as they provide insights into large-scale Late Pleistocene avulsion of the Tisza River. OSL dating, complemented with inferred transport directions determined from heavy mineral analysis of fluvial sediments in the Körös basin, has revealed an ancient large meandering river system that can be identified with the palaeo-Tisza, which was flowing along a tectonically controlled depression during the Late Pleniglacial. Successions in the Middle Tisza region have allowed differentiation between the older channels of the palaeo-Bodrog River and the Sajó-Hernád alluvial fan and the younger meander belts of the new course of the Tisza. In the Tisza system, changes in river style (braided to various scales of meandering) show correspondence to millennial-scale climate changes of the last 25Â ka, while in the Körös basin the effects of tectonics are overprinted onto the regional climatic signals.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Gyula Gábris, Annamária Nádor,