Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4684732 Geomorphology 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We use 210Pb to compare floodplain deposition in regulated and unregulated reaches.•We find consistent profiles of 210Pb inventories across all our sites.•Total sediment deposition is less and more focused in regulated reaches.•We infer a uniformity of process across regulated and unregulated floodplains.

Rates and the spatial extent of near-channel floodplain sedimentation on regulated and unregulated reaches in two upland rivers in central Vermont, U.S.A. are measured using the short-lived fallout radionuclide 210Pb. We find consistent profiles of 210Pb inventories across all sites; inventories are low immediately next to the channel, increase to a peak value as the inundation frequency decreases and then asymptotically diminish with distance from the channel to the equilibrium inventory associated with atmospheric deposition alone. We infer from our data that flow regulation has impacted sediment deposition to floodplains below the dam; total sediment deposition is less and it is constrained to a narrower band immediately along the active channel. Flow regulation does not appear, however, to impact the general form of the 210Pb inventory profile, suggesting a uniformity of process across regulated and unregulated floodplains.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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