Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6446891 | Quaternary Science Reviews | 2007 | 20 Pages |
Abstract
We present the first overall synthesis of the terrace deposits of the River Euphrates in SE Turkey, northern Syria, and western Iraq, combining new observations with summaries of data sets from different reaches that had previously been independently studied on a piecemeal basis. The largest number of terraces observed in any reach of the Euphrates is 11, in western Iraq, where this river leaves the uplands of the Arabian Platform. In many other localities not more than 5 or 6 terraces have previously been identified, although we infer that some of these are resolvable into multiple terraces. These terraces are typically formed of gravel, principally consisting of Neotethyan ophiolite and metamorphic lithologies transported from Anatolia. Although older gravels are also evident, most of the Euphrates terrace deposits appear, given the chronologies that have been established for different parts of the study region, to date from the late Early Pleistocene onwards, the cold stages most often represented being interpreted as marine Oxygen Isotope Stages 22, 16, 12, 8, 6 and/or 4, and 2. The formation of this terrace staircase reflects regional uplift of the Arabian Platform. Estimated amounts of uplift since the Middle Pliocene decrease southeastward from almost 300Â m in SE Turkey to â¼150Â m in western Iraq. Uplift rates increased in the late Early Pleistocene, the uplift estimated since then decreasing from â¼110Â m in SE Turkey to a minimum of â¼50Â m in the Syria-Iraq border region, then increasing further downstream across western Iraq to â¼70Â m. Numerical modelling of this uplift indicates a relatively thin mobile lower-crustal layer, consistent with the low surface heat flow in the Arabian Platform.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
Tuncer Demir, Rob Westaway, David R. Bridgland, Ali Seyrek,