Arnaud Beckers
University of Liège
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Featured researches published by Arnaud Beckers.
Geologie En Mijnbouw | 2012
Alain Demoulin; Arnaud Beckers; Gilles Rixhon; Régis Braucher; D. Bourles; Lionel Siame
While climatic models of valley downcutting discuss the origin of terrace staircases in valleys of middle Europe within the frame of alternating cold and temperate periods of the Quaternary, other models, starting from a base level fall imposed by an initial tectonic signal, describe the response of the drainage network mainly as the propagation of an erosion wave from the place of base level fall (the margin of the uplifted region) toward the headwaters, the two types of model being rarely confronted. In the Ardennes (West Europe), cosmogenic 10 Be and 26 Al ages have recently been calculated for the abandonment of the Younger Main Terrace (YMT) level, a prominent feature at mid-height of the valleysides marking the starting point of the mid-Pleistocene phase of deep river incision in the massif. These ages show that the terrace has been abandoned diachronically as the result of a migrating erosion wave that started at 0.73 Ma in the Meuse catchment just north of the massif, soon entered the latter, and is still visible in the current long profiles of the Ardennian Ourthe tributaries as knickpoints disturbing their upper reaches. At first glance, these new findings are incompatible with the common belief that the terraces of the Ardennian rivers were generated by a climatically triggered stepwise general incision of the river profiles. However, several details of the terrace staircases (larger than average vertical spacing between the YMT and the next younger terrace, varying number of post-YMT terraces in trunk stream, tributaries and subtributaries) show that a combination of the climatic and tectonic models of river incision is able to satisfactorily account for all available data. The cosmogenic ages of the YMT also point out a particular behaviour of the migrating knickpoints, which apparently propagated on average more slowly in the main rivers than in the tributaries, in contradiction with the relation that makes knickpoint celerity depend directly on drainage area. We tentatively suggest a process accounting for such anomalies in migration rates.
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences | 2013
Arnaud Beckers; Benjamin Dewals; Sébastien Erpicum; Sébastien Dujardin; Sylvain Detrembleur; Jacques Teller; Michel Pirotton; Pierre Archambeau
Marine Geology | 2015
Arnaud Beckers; Aurélia Hubert-Ferrari; C. Beck; Sarah Bodeux; Efthymios Tripsanas; Dimitris Sakellariou; Marc De Batist
Geomorphology | 2015
Alain Demoulin; Arnaud Beckers; Aurélia Hubert-Ferrari
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2015
Arnaud Beckers; Benoît Bovy; Eric Hallot; Alain Demoulin
Tectonophysics | 2013
Alain Demoulin; T. Bayer Altin; Arnaud Beckers
Marine Geology | 2016
Arnaud Beckers; C. Beck; Aurélia Hubert-Ferrari; Efthymios Tripsanas; Christian Crouzet; Dimitris Sakellariou; G. Papatheodorou; M. De Batist
Geomorphology | 2012
Alain Demoulin; Arnaud Beckers; Benoît Bovy
Geophysical Research Abstracts | 2013
Arnaud Beckers; Clément Mortier; C. Beck; Aurelia Hubert; Jean-Louis Reyss; Efthymios Tripsanas; Dimitris Sakellariou; Marc De Batist; Koen De Rycker; Pascale Bascou; David Strivay
Marine Geology | 2017
Arnaud Beckers; C. Beck; Aurélia Hubert-Ferrari; Jean-Louis Reyss; Clément Mortier; Paola Albini; Andrea Rovida; Anne-Lise Develle; Efthymios Tripsanas; Dimitris Sakellariou; Christian Crouzet; Oona Scotti