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Dive into the research topics where Stefanie Tofelde is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefanie Tofelde.


Science | 2016

Repeated catastrophic valley infill following medieval earthquakes in the Nepal Himalaya

Wolfgang Schwanghart; Anne Bernhardt; Amelie Stolle; Philipp Hoelzmann; Basanta Raj Adhikari; Christoff Andermann; Stefanie Tofelde; Silke Merchel; Georg Rugel; Monique Fort; Oliver Korup

Nepals quake-driven landslide hazards Large earthquakes can trigger dangerous landslides across a wide geographic region. The 2015 Mw 7.8 Gorhka earthquake near Kathmandu, Nepal, was no exception. Kargal et al. used remote observations to compile a massive catalog of triggered debris flows. The satellite-based observations came from a rapid response team assisting the disaster relief effort. Schwanghart et al. show that Kathmandu escaped the historically catastrophic landslides associated with earthquakes in 1100, 1255, and 1344 C.E. near Nepals second largest city, Pokhara. These two studies underscore the importance of determining slope stability in mountainous, earthquake-prone regions. Science, this issue p. 10.1126/science.aac8353; see also p. 147 Sediment records are used to identify catastrophic debris flows from paleoquakes near Pokhara, Nepal. Geomorphic footprints of past large Himalayan earthquakes are elusive, although they are urgently needed for gauging and predicting recovery times of seismically perturbed mountain landscapes. We present evidence of catastrophic valley infill following at least three medieval earthquakes in the Nepal Himalaya. Radiocarbon dates from peat beds, plant macrofossils, and humic silts in fine-grained tributary sediments near Pokhara, Nepal’s second-largest city, match the timing of nearby M > 8 earthquakes in ~1100, 1255, and 1344 C.E. The upstream dip of tributary valley fills and x-ray fluorescence spectrometry of their provenance rule out local sources. Instead, geomorphic and sedimentary evidence is consistent with catastrophic fluvial aggradation and debris flows that had plugged several tributaries with tens of meters of calcareous sediment from a Higher Himalayan source >60 kilometers away.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Landscape response to late Pleistocene climate change in NW Argentina: Sediment flux modulated by basin geometry and connectivity

Taylor F. Schildgen; Ruth A. J. Robinson; Sara Savi; William M. Phillips; Joel Q. Spencer; Bodo Bookhagen; Dirk Scherler; Stefanie Tofelde; Ricardo N. Alonso; Peter W. Kubik; Steven A. Binnie; Manfred R. Strecker

Citation: Schildgen, T. F., Robinson, R. A. J., Savi, S., Phillips, W. M., Spencer, J. Q. G., Bookhagen, B., . . . Strecker, M. R. (2016). Landscape response to late Pleistocene climate change in NW Argentina: Sediment flux modulated by basin geometry and connectivity. Journal of Geophysical Research-Earth Surface, 121(2), 392-414. doi:10.1002/2015jf003607


Scientific Reports | 2016

Miocene orographic uplift forces rapid hydrological change in the southern central Andes

Alexander Rohrmann; Dirk Sachse; Andreas Mulch; Heiko Pingel; Stefanie Tofelde; Ricardo N. Alonso; Manfred R. Strecker

Rainfall in the central Andes associated with the South American Monsoon and the South American Low-Level Jet results from orographic effects on atmospheric circulation exerted by the Andean Plateau and the Eastern Cordillera. However, despite its importance for South American climate, no reliable records exist that allow decoding the evolution of thresholds and interactions between Andean topography and atmospheric circulation, especially regarding the onset of humid conditions in the inherently dry southern central Andes. Here, we employ multi-proxy isotope data of lipid biomarkers, pedogenic carbonates and volcanic glass from the Eastern Cordillera of NW Argentina and present the first long-term evapotranspiration record. We find that regional eco-hydrology and vegetation changes are associated with initiation of moisture transport via the South American Low-Level Jet at 7.6 Ma, and subsequent lateral growth of the orogen at 6.5 Ma. Our results highlight that topographically induced changes in atmospheric circulation patterns, not global climate change, were responsible for late Miocene environmental change in this part of the southern hemisphere. This suggests that mountain building over time fundamentally controlled habitat evolution along the central Andes.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Climatic controls on debris‐flow activity and sediment aggradation: The Del Medio fan, NW Argentina

Sara Savi; Taylor F. Schildgen; Stefanie Tofelde; Hella Wittmann; Dirk Scherler; Jürgen Mey; Ricardo N. Alonso; Manfred R. Strecker

In the Central Andes, several studies on alluvial terraces and valley fills have linked sediment aggradation to periods of enhanced sediment supply. However, debate continues over whether tectonic or climatic factors are most important in triggering the enhanced supply. The Del Medio catchment in the Humahuaca Basin (Eastern Cordillera, NW Argentina) is located within a transition zone between sub-humid and arid climates and hosts the only active debris-flow fan within this intermontane valley. By combining 10Be analyses of boulder and sediment samples within the Del Medio catchment, with regional morphometric measurements of nearby catchments, we identify the surface processes responsible for aggradation in the Del Medio fan and their likely triggers. We find that the fan surface has been shaped by debris flows and channel avulsions during the last 400 years. Among potential tectonic, climatic, and autogenic factors that might influence deposition, our analyses point to a combination of several favorable factors that drive aggradation. These are in particular the impact of occasional abundant rainfall on steep slopes in rock types prone to failure, located in a region characterized by relatively low rainfall amounts and limited transport capacity. These characteristics are primarily associated with the climatic transition zone between the humid foreland and the arid orogen interior, which creates an imbalance between sediment supply and sediment transfer. The conditions and processes that drive aggradation in the Del Medio catchment today may provide a modern analog for the conditions and processes that drove aggradation in other nearby tributaries in the past.


Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2018

Effects of deep-seated versus shallow hillslope processes on cosmogenic 10Be concentrations in fluvial sand and gravel: The effect of hillslope processes on 10Be concentrations

Stefanie Tofelde; Walter Duesing; Taylor F. Schildgen; Andrew D. Wickert; Hella Wittmann; Ricardo N. Alonso; Manfred R. Strecker

Terrestrial cosmogenic nuclide (TCN) concentrations in fluvial sediment, from which denudation rates are commonly inferred, can be affected by hillslope processes. TCN concentrations in gravel and sand may differ if localized, deep-excavation processes (e.g. landslides, debris flows) affect the contributing catchment, whereas the TCN concentrations of sand and gravel tend to be more similar when diffusional processes like soil creep and sheetwash are dominant. To date, however, no study has systematically compared TCN concentrations in different detrital grain-size fractions with a detailed inventory of hillslope processes from the entire catchment. Here we compare concentrations of the TCN Be in 20 detrital sand samples from the Quebrada del Toro (southern Central Andes, Argentina) to a hillslope-process inventory from each contributing catchment. Our comparison reveals a shift from lowslope gullying and scree production in slowly denuding, low-slope areas to steep-slope gullying and landsliding in fast-denuding, steep areas. To investigate whether the nature of hillslope processes (locally excavating or more uniformly denuding) may be reflected in a comparison of the Be concentrations of sand and gravel, we define the normalized sand-gravel index (NSGI) as the Be-concentration difference between sand and gravel divided by their summed concentrations. We find a positive, linear relationship between the NSGI and median slope, such that our NSGI values broadly reflect the shift in hillslope processes from lowslope gullying and scree production to steep-slope gullying and landsliding. Higher NSGI values characterize regions affected by steep-slope gullying or landsliding. We relate the large scatter in the relationship, which is exhibited particularly in low-slope areas, to reduced hillslope-channel connectivity and associated transient sediment storage within those catchments. While high NSGI values in well-connected catchments are a reliable signal of deep-excavation processes, hillslope excavation processes may not be reliably recorded by NSGI values where sediment experiences transient storage.


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2016

Elevation-dependent changes in n-alkane δD and soil GDGTs across the South Central Andes

V. Nieto-Moreno; Alexander Rohrmann; Marcel T J van der Meer; Jaap S. Sinninghe Damsté; Dirk Sachse; Stefanie Tofelde; Eva M Niedermeyer; Manfred R. Strecker; Andreas Mulch


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2017

100 kyr fluvial cut-and-fill terrace cycles since the Middle Pleistocene in the southern Central Andes, NW Argentina

Stefanie Tofelde; Taylor F. Schildgen; Sara Savi; Heiko Pingel; Andrew D. Wickert; Bodo Bookhagen; Hella Wittmann; Ricardo N. Alonso; John M. Cottle; Manfred R. Strecker


Earth Surface Dynamics Discussions | 2017

Determination limits for cosmogenic 10 Be and their importance for geomorphic applications

Sara Savi; Stefanie Tofelde; Hella Wittmann; Fabiana Castino; Taylor F. Schildgen


The EGU General Assembly | 2016

Geomorphic legacy of medieval Himalayan earthquakes in the Pokhara Valley

Wolfgang Schwanghart; Anne Bernhardt; Amelie Stolle; Philipp Hoelzmann; Basanta Raj Adhikari; Christoff Andermann; Stefanie Tofelde; Silke Merchel; Georg Rugel; Monique Fort; Oliver Korup


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Climatic controls on debris-flow activity and sediment aggradation: The Del Medio fan, NW Argentina: CLIMATIC CONTROLS ON FAN AGGRADATION

Sara Savi; Taylor F. Schildgen; Stefanie Tofelde; Hella Wittmann; Dirk Scherler; Jürgen Mey; Ricardo N. Alonso; Manfred R. Strecker

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Ricardo N. Alonso

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Sara Savi

University of Potsdam

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Dirk Scherler

Free University of Berlin

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Andreas Mulch

Goethe University Frankfurt

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Anne Bernhardt

Free University of Berlin

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