Abstract
The geomorphology of Gondwana was different from that of the fragments created when it broke up. These fragments, now continents and large islands, inherited some features from the original Gondwana landscape, including major drainage patterns and planation surfaces. Other features including Great Escarpments could only form after the break-up, and some erosion surfaces are also formed after break-up and graded to new base levels. The continents of Gondwana derivation have geomorphic histories that have many features in common but also some distinct features peculiar to individual fragments.
In this chapter I describe the geomorphology of the Gondwana fragments and give an outline of the various ways the evidence has been interpreted, including the major controversies. All the fragments have a succession of planation surfaces but seldom the neat step-like succession of simplistic descriptions. Their age and correlation is difficult to determine, as is their relationship to tectonics and changes of climate. Lester King was perhaps premature in his attempts to correlate planation surfaces all over the world, but his aim is still a valuable lead. Since his day there has been a profusion of more detailed local studies, and the next task is to integrate them into a new Gondwana-wide synthesis.
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Acknowledgements
I thank Colin Pain for assistance with the illustrations and decades of discussion on the topics of this chapter. I also thank my wife Janetta for her assistance on much of my fieldwork and for help in editing this chapter.
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Ollier, C. (2014). Planation Surfaces of the Gondwana Continents: Synthesis and Problems. In: Rabassa, J., Ollier, C. (eds) Gondwana Landscapes in southern South America. Springer Earth System Sciences. Springer, Dordrecht. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7702-6_4
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