AUTHOR=Boulton Sarah J. TITLE=Geomorphic Response to Differential Uplift: River Long Profiles and Knickpoints From Guadalcanal and Makira (Solomon Islands) JOURNAL=Frontiers in Earth Science VOLUME=8 YEAR=2020 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/earth-science/articles/10.3389/feart.2020.00010 DOI=10.3389/feart.2020.00010 ISSN=2296-6463 ABSTRACT=
Knickpoints have long been recognized as key geomorphic features that can be used to reveal the landscape evolution of a region. In particular, mobile knickpoints resulting from relative base-level fall record a landscape in the process of change and can encode information about the timing and rate of landscape response. Here, digital elevation model analysis is undertaken to; (a) identify topographic lineaments related to active faulting, and (b) extract geomorphic metrics and document associated knickpoints for rivers on Guadalcanal and Makira (San Cristobal) part of the Solomon Island chain. These islands have been experiencing uplift of up to 2 mm/year since at least the mid Holocene on the upper (Pacific) plate of the San Cristobal Trench of the Solomon Island Forearc. For Guadalcanal, 23 out of 53 studied rivers exhibit slope-break knickpoints, characteristic of base-level fall, and 27 new topographic lineaments with ∼E-W orientation are identified. By contrast, on Makira 14 of 41 studied rivers have slope-break knickpoints, where the rivers are steeper below the knickpoint than above. In addition, 76 new lineaments are inferred, trending NE-SW and likely to be extensional faults. For both Guadalcanal and Makira there is a good correlation between knickpoint elevation/catchment area and distance upstream from the sea, and a weak correlation between relief and knickpoint elevation. There are no clear relationships between the knickpoints and the new topographic lineaments. These data indicate that both islands are undergoing active river incision caused by regional tectonic uplift along an active subduction zone. On Makira, river steepness (