The Yangtze River in China is 40 million years older than was previously1 thought, according to new research. A study of minerals by a team led by Durham University reveals that the Yangtze River began to cut the Three Gorges3(长江三峡) area around 45 million years ago, making it much older than previously believed.
The Yangtze River, the third-longest river in the world, has played a central role in the development of Chinese culture, and the Three Gorges, which separate the Sichuan Basin in the west from the lowlands of central and eastern China to the east, have particular historical, cultural, and geomorphological(地貌,地形) significance.
Without the transport pathway created by the Three Gorges, south-western China – including the rich agricultural area of Sichuan Province, known as China's 'rice bowl' – would have remained cut off from the rest of the country by the otherwise inaccessible4(难接近的) mountains that surround the region.
The new findings, published in Geology, show that sediments6(沉积物) from the Three Gorges, previously analysed by researchers and dated as being only 1-2 million years old, must have been deposited long after the Three Gorges were cut.
The research team, led by Dr Alexander Densmore from the Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience, Durham University, determined7 the onset8 of incision9 in the Three Gorges by looking at the cooling of minerals in the granite10(花岗岩) that underlies11 the Three Gorges Dam at Sandouping in Hubei Province. The granite containing these apatite(磷灰石) grains was cooled to lower temperatures as the river cut down through it.
Prior work on the origin of the Three Gorges has shown that the Yangtze River most likely began as a set of small, non-descript streams that drained both west and east, out of a range of low mountains in central China.
It was argued that the merger12 of these streams gave rise to the progressive development of a much larger, east-flowing river system that became the Yangtze River. Many scientists agreed that the most likely point of merger of the streams was in the Three Gorges area.
Dr Alex Densmore said: "The fact that erosion had removed all of the evidence of the old, pre-merger river courses made dating the river particularly difficult.
"Prior attempts to date the Three Gorges placed their age at only 1-2 million years but this was based on sediments found within the gorges(峡谷) . If this were the case, the river would have had to have been carved into the rocks very quickly, and this would have required extremely high incision rates.
"We used the number of damage trails in the mineral apatite to tell us when the rocks were cooled below a particular temperature and thus when gorge2 incision began."
The research team, which involved scientists from Durham, Chengdu and Victoria universities, and researchers in the UK and Germany, found that samples near the gorges showed that cooling began about 45 million years ago, whereas samples taken farther away from the river show no evidence of that cooling. Thus, the cooling must have been caused by gorge incision, rather than by more regional erosion, according to the scientists.
Dr Densmore added: "The Yangtze River is much older than previously thought and extremely high incision(切开,切口) rates were not required to create the distinctive13 gorges. It formed slowly, over a much longer time-span."
The research, funded by the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, also helped to explain a mysterious episode of erosion that affected14 the eastern part of the Tibetan Plateau. 45 million years ago, sediment5 shed from the rising Tibetan Plateau to the west was trapped in a large basin upstream(上游) of the future Three Gorges area.
Dr Densmore said: "As the Gorges were cut, they acted as like a plughole(出水孔) in a giant bathtub, allowing that sediment to be eroded15 and flushed down into the growing Yangtze River and out into the East China Sea, depositing the sediment in the lowland areas of eastern China."