Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Anomalously high relief on Denali, Alaska, caused by tectonic, lithologic, and climatic drivers

September 13, 2024
We assess the growth of anomalously high relief on Denali, located in the Alaska Range, Alaska, and the tallest mountain in North America (6190 masl). Denali is 3000 m taller than most surrounding peaks. It lies inside a 19° restraining bend in the active Denali fault system that is moving at about 7 mm/yr, and thus there is a tectonic and structural driver for ongoing rock uplift. High relief around Denali is also due, in part, to its granitic rock type and low fracture density relative to adjacent metasediments. Here we show that unique climatic conditions at high elevations also contribute to the growth of relief. We examine 10Be concentrations in 1) three new gravel samples between 3500 and 5200 m elevation from sites unaffected by recent glacial erosion, 2) previously published samples from a sidewall of the Kahiltna Glacier from 2400 to 2800 masl, 3) previously published samples from medial moraines along the length of the Kahiltna Glacier from 1400 to ~500 masl, and 4) previously published alluvial samples along the Kahiltna River at an elevation of ~200 masl. These samples constitute a transect extending more than 5000 vertical meters, and the data establish that erosion rates decrease with elevation and contribute to the growth of relief. Erosion rates for the three new high-elevation samples are calculated to 4.6±0.6 mm/ka at 5.2 km, 28.6±3.7 mm/ka at 4.0 km, and 38±5 mm/ka at 3.5 km. Erosion rates at intermediate elevations, on the sidewall of the Kahiltna Glacier, range between 160-327 mm/ka. Along the medial moraines inferred erosion rates range between 140-537 mm/ka, and basin-wide erosion rates calculated from sediments in the river below the glacier range between 450-896 mm/ka. These differences in erosion rates can create relief of 3 km within 1-10 Ma, well within the estimated period of increase in rock uplift and exhumation on Denali over the last ~6 Ma. Meteorological data from 2130 to 5550 masl at 5 sites show it rarely gets above freezing above 4 km elevation, indicating that frost weathering currently plays a diminished role in erosion at high elevations. The immediate implication of this temperature and erosional correlation is an increase in relief. This is the first study to directly measure a significant decrease in erosion rates at high elevations in the relative absence of frost weathering. The results highlight the combined influence of rock type, glacial erosion, and permanent sub-zero temperatures on erosion rates. In combination with active faulting, the data explain the resultant increase in relief along the southern side of the Alaska Range over the past 100 ka.
Publication Year 2024
Title Anomalously high relief on Denali, Alaska, caused by tectonic, lithologic, and climatic drivers
DOI 10.1016/j.epsl.2024.118999
Authors Ari Matmon, Peter J. Haeussler, Michael Loso, ASTER Team
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Index ID 70265814
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Alaska Science Center Geology Minerals
Was this page helpful?