کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
5780999 | 1635361 | 2017 | 13 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
- Repeat topographic surveys of 34-km of river reveal differences in sediment budgets.
- Locations of erosion and deposition tend to be paired during moderate floods.
- Large floods caused less net erosion than moderate floods due to backwater controls.
- There is strong differentiation in volumetric change between morphological units.
- Terrace erosion looks like a lot, but is much less than channel and floodplain erosion.
High-resolution topographic surveys using LiDAR and multibeam sonar can be used to characterize and quantify fluvial change. This study used repeat surveys to explore how topographic change, fluvial processes, sediment budgets, and aggradation and incision rates vary across spatial scales and across two contrasting decadal flow regimes in a regulated gravel/cobble river. A novel method for quantifying digital elevation model uncertainty was developed and applied to a topographic change detection analysis from 2006/2008 to 2014. During this period, which had four modest ~Â 3-5Â year floods, most sediment was laterally redistributed through bank erosion and channel migration. Erosion primarily occurred in the floodplain (97,000Â m3), terraces (80,000Â m3), and lateral bars (58,000Â m3); while deposition occurred in the adjacent pools (73,000Â m3), fast glides (48,000Â m3), and runs (36,000Â m3). In contrast, significantly higher magnitude and longer duration floods from 1999 to 2006/2008 caused sediment to be displaced longitudinally, with the upstream reaches exporting sediment and the downstream reaches aggrading. The river maintained floodplain connectivity during both periods, despite different processes dominating the type of connectivity. Larger floods promoted overbank scour and avulsion, while smaller floods promoted bank erosion and lateral migration. This study explores and illustrates how the geomorphic response to contrasting flood regimes in a nonuniform river is highly dependent on which landforms are controlling hydraulics.
Journal: Geomorphology - Volume 288, 1 July 2017, Pages 39-51