River floodplain regime and stratigraphy. Drs. Nanette C. Kingma.

Similar documents
NATURE OF RIVERS B-1. Channel Function... ALLUVIAL FEATURES. ... to successfully carry sediment and water from the watershed. ...dissipate energy.

Lecture 19: Fluvial Facies

Chapter 8: Learning objectives

Deep Water Systems and Sequence Stratigraphy. By: Matt Kyrias, Chris Majerczyk, Nick Whitcomb, Wesley Vermillion

SCOPE OF PRESENTATION STREAM DYNAMICS, CHANNEL RESTORATION PLANS, & SEDIMENT TRANSPORT ANALYSES IN RELATION TO RESTORATION PLANS

GLG362/GLG598 Geomorphology K. Whipple October, 2009 I. Characteristics of Alluvial Channels

The Equilibrium Channel & Channel Change. Peter Wilcock 3 August 2016

SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION DELFT 3-D MODELING: MODEL DESIGN, SETUP, AND ANALYSIS

Wetland & Floodplain Functional Assessments and Mapping To Protect and Restore Riverine Systems in Vermont. Mike Kline and Laura Lapierre Vermont DEC

Why Geomorphology for Fish Passage

ES 105 Surface Processes I. Hydrologic cycle A. Distribution % in oceans 2. >3% surface water a. +99% surface water in glaciers b.

Earth Science Chapter 6 Section 2 Review

Tom Ballestero University of New Hampshire. 1 May 2013

Aquifer an underground zone or layer of sand, gravel, or porous rock that is saturated with water.

Streams. Stream Water Flow

Do you think sediment transport is a concern?

Stream Classification

The Hydrologic Cycle

STREAM SYSTEMS and FLOODS

Precipitation Evaporation Infiltration Earth s Water and the Hydrologic Cycle. Runoff Transpiration

Annotated Bibliography of River Avulsions Pat Dryer Geography 364 5/14/2007

GEOL 1121 Earth Processes and Environments

A floodplain is the flat land immediately surrounding a stream channel and innundated at 5mes of high flow.

Upper Truckee River Restoration Lake Tahoe, California Presented by Brendan Belby Sacramento, California

NATURAL RIVER. Karima Attia Nile Research Institute

Landscape Development

3/3/2013. The hydro cycle water returns from the sea. All "toilet to tap." Introduction to Environmental Geology, 5e

(3) Sediment Movement Classes of sediment transported

Fluvial Geomorphology

Summary. Streams and Drainage Systems

11/12/2014. Running Water. Introduction. Water on Earth. The Hydrologic Cycle. Fluid Flow

GY 111 Lecture Note Series Sedimentary Environments 2: Rivers and Deltas

Diagnostic Geomorphic Methods for Understanding Future Behavior of Lake Superior Streams What Have We Learned in Two Decades?

Running Water Earth - Chapter 16 Stan Hatfield Southwestern Illinois College

Discharge. Discharge (Streamflow) is: Q = Velocity (L T -1 ) x Area (L 2 ) Units: L 3 T -1 e.g., m 3 s -1. Velocity. Area

Ways To Identify Background Verses Accelerated Erosion

Why Stabilizing the Stream As-Is is Not Enough

Dolores River Watershed Study

Erosion Surface Water. moving, transporting, and depositing sediment.

Final Exam. Running Water Erosion and Deposition. Willamette Discharge. Running Water

Holocene Lower Mississippi River Avulsions: Autogenic Versus Allogenic Forcing*

BZ471, Steam Biology & Ecology Exam 1

Appendix E Rosgen Classification

ADDRESSING GEOMORPHIC AND HYDRAULIC CONTROLS IN OFF-CHANNEL HABITAT DESIGN

The Hydrologic Cycle STREAM SYSTEMS. Earth s Water and the Hydrologic Cycle. The Hydrologic Cycle. Hydrologic Cycle

PolyMet NorthMet Project

Surface Water and Stream Development

River Response. Sediment Water Wood. Confinement. Bank material. Channel morphology. Valley slope. Riparian vegetation.

Stream Geomorphology. Leslie A. Morrissey UVM July 25, 2012

Analysis of coarse sediment connectivity in semiarid river channels

LAB-SCALE INVESTIGATION ONBAR FORMATION COORDINATES IN RIVER BASED ON FLOW AND SEDIMENT

FLUVIAL LANDFORMS. Floodplains

MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF FLUVIAL SEDIMENT DELIVERY, NEKA RIVER, IRAN. S.E. Kermani H. Golmaee M.Z. Ahmadi

Rapid Geomorphic Assessments: RGA s

Four Mile Run Levee Corridor Stream Restoration

(3) Sediment Movement Classes of sediment transported

Historical channel change on the Upper Gila River, Arizona and New Mexico in response to anthropogenic modifications and extreme floods

Stream Restoration and Environmental River Mechanics. Objectives. Pierre Y. Julien. 1. Peligre Dam in Haiti (deforestation)

Watershed Assessment of River Stability and Sediment Supply: Advancing the Science of Watershed Analysis

SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL

Geo 302D: Age of Dinosaurs. LAB 2: Sedimentary rocks and processes

PR206 NARRATIVE Updated 16 June 2015

Rivers T. Perron

OBJECTIVES. Fluvial Geomorphology? STREAM CLASSIFICATION & RIVER ASSESSMENT

Riparian Assessment. Steps in the right direction... Drainage Basin/Watershed: Start by Thinking Big. Riparian Assessment vs.

Step 5: Channel Bed and Planform Changes

Business. Meteorologic monitoring. Field trip? Reader. Other?

May 7, Roger Leventhal, P.E. Marin County Public Works Laurel Collins Watershed Sciences

7.3 Sediment Delivery Analysis

mountain rivers fixed channel boundaries (bedrock banks and bed) high transport capacity low storage input output

Dam Removal Analysis Guidelines for Sediment

Floods Lecture #21 20

Lab Final Review 4/16/18

Seismic Expressions of Submarine Channel - Levee Systems and Their Architectural Elements

River Morphology. EAD 511 River management

ES120 Sedimentology/Stratigraphy

Physical modeling to guide river restoration projects: An Overview

DOWNSTREAM SORTING OF SEDIMENT (additional control on channel width, depth and slope)

Geomorphology Studies

Geomorphology Geology 450/750 Spring Fluvial Processes Project Analysis of Redwood Creek Field Data Due Wednesday, May 26

Flow regime, floodplain inundation and floodplain waterbody connectivity at Congaree National Park

1 INTRODUCTION AND MAJOR FINDINGS... 1

Geomorphic Importance of Winter Peak Flows and Annual Snowmelt Hydrographs in a Sierra Nevada Boulder-Bedrock River

Laboratory Exercise #3 The Hydrologic Cycle and Running Water Processes

GY 402: Sedimentary Petrology

Avoiding Geohazards in the Mid-Atlantic Highlands by Using Natural Stream Principles

Accommodation. Tectonics (local to regional) Subsidence Uplift

GY 111: Physical Geology

Rivers and Landslides

Vermont Stream Geomorphic Assessment. Appendix E. River Corridor Delineation Process. VT Agency of Natural Resources. April, E0 - April, 2004

Fish Passage at Road Crossings

Modeling Post-Development Runoff and Channel Impacts from Hydromodification: Practical Tools for Hydromodification Assessment

Fluvial Processes in River Engineering

Sediment Transport Analysis for Stream Restoration Design: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.

The River Restoration Centre therrc.co.uk. Understanding Fluvial Processes: supporting River Restoration. Dr Jenny Mant

LECTURE 1: INTRODUCTION, HISTORY, AND DEFINITIONS

!"#$%&&'()*+#$%(,-./0*)%(!

Flowing Streams. Adapted from: Field Exercise: Stream Flow Dynamics & Sedimentation by Daniel J. Bisaccio and Donald L. Woodrow.

Stratigraphic modelling using CHILD

Determination of uplift rates of fluvial terraces across the Siwaliks Hills, Himalayas of central Nepal

Transcription:

River floodplain regime and stratigraphy. Drs. Nanette C. Kingma.

Formation of floodplain. Formation of floodplains: lateral channel migration in channel deposition suspended-load fall out during higher than normal stage bank overtopping flow width >> v< sediments in suspension increased roughness sediment load Independent processes, may occur simultaneous. 2

Sedimentary facies. Two sedimentary facies:. Channel bed deposits Bottom stratum relative coarse sedimentary deposits on the channel- bed; preserved by burial during the lateral migration. 2. Bank and overbank deposits Top stratum relative fine sedimentary deposits on the upper channel bank: levee, terrace surfaces etc formed during infrequent high streams. 3

Sedimentary facies. Channel bed deposits: channel lag deposits; pointbar deposits; low stage slackwater deposits. 4

Sedimentary facies. Bank and overbank deposits: levee and bank deposits; floodbasin or backswamp deposits; crevasse splay deposits; terrace veneer. 5

Sedimentary facies. Crevassse splay: also relative coarse, due to breach of the levee. Low stage slack water deposits; fine grained deposits that accumulate on the channel bed in local slack water areas during low discharges. Often at downstream parts of pointbars. thin fine layers interbedded by coarser layers. 6

Bottom- versus top stratum. 7

Alluvial channel adjustments to infrequent higher than normal discharges. Quick response Large time basis; decades - centuries. 8

Adjustment of floodplain facies geometry to higher than normal discharges. 9 Four different river flow regimes (situation: a,b,c,d) ( plotted as frequency of various daily mean river stages) compared to inferred thickness of the local floodplains top stratum and bottom stratum facies. Capacity of river channels is commonly set by higher than normal discharges but not necessarily rare high magnitude events. System at equilibrium: local river stage associated with (this) bankfull discharge determines by definition the max. elevation reached by the top stratum facies. equilibrium thickness!

Adjustment of floodplain facies geometry to higher than normal discharges: situation a. Constant flow regime:a river without flood events. No top stratum; only bottom stratum, since no floods occur. such rivers are uncommon in nature. 0

Adjustment of floodplain facies geometry to higher than normal discharges: situation b. Modal flow slightly below bankful stage; Q modal < Q bankfull development of a thin top stratum.

Adjustment of floodplain facies geometry to higher than normal discharges-2. The bankfull stage may,in turn, be either much higher than,or slightly higher than the most frequent stage which defines the channel bed environment (compare b and c).; In the zone between the most frequent river stage and the top of the channel bank, rooted vegetation strongly retards the flow competence. 2

Adjustment of floodplain facies geometry to higher than normal discharges: situation c. Bankfull flow much larger than modal flow. Q modal << Q bankfull development of a thick top stratum. 3

Top stratum Top stratum controlled by: Flood regime; Lateral migration: for rapidly meandering rivers, pointbar sedimentation is the most important factor in local floodplain development. 4

Situation d. Channel is comparatively large in relation to mean daily discharge; common in semi-arid regions; top stratum is absent. Channel is shaped by rare high discharge events. 5 Overbank floods essentially absent due to quick channel enlargements in response to high discharges.

Situation d. Favorable conditions: Occurrence of high discharge events; they are large in relation to normal discharges; Low local water tables deeply cut channels preserved when created. In up- and or downstream reaches the channel is usually broad and shallow; Abrupt geomorphic thresholds (headcuts) separate such aggrading from degrading, entrenched reaches. 6

Situation d. Include figure 0 pp 47 Fl Geomorphology. 7

Floodplain stratigraphy Floodplain stratigraphy is the science of mapping and interpreting floodplain deposits of different age. Basic goal:reconstruction of the sequence of depositional events. 8

Techniques. Absolute dating methods; soil- stratigraphy: using buried soils as stratigraphic markers; morpho-stratigraphy: using surface topography to define terraces, etc. litho-stratigraphy; defining sedimentary units on the basis of physical characteristics and stratigraphic relations. 9

Non-continuous sedimentation. The existence of floodplain stratigraphy itself indicates that non-continous sedimentation occurred e.g. Laterally migrating stream channels bankerosion (uncomformity) & slow accretion on pointbars & channel banks (conformable). As a the channels move, they maintain equilibrium. 2 0

States of channel floodplain morphologies (for meandering rivers).. Stable floodplain configuration: adjusted situation; net top stratum deposition slow. 2. Active floodplain configuration: floodplain sedimentation & bank erosion may occur rapid. Alternation of () and (2) is an important cause of floodplain stratigraphy. 2

Accumulation of a new floodplain. New top stratum is accumulated, during a period of fluvial activity. Slow channel migration, relatively slow deposition rates and soil profiles can develop 2 2

Morpho-stratigraphy. Episodicity of floodplain sedimentation leads to the development of floodplain and river terraces. Not always a - relation between surfaces and lithostratigraphic units or soil stratigraphic units. 2 3

Litho-stratigraphy. Non-continuous floodplain sedimentation also results in recognizable lithologic contrasts between alluvia of different age. Contrasts may develop from: effects of in-situ weathering; changes from sediment source; changes in dominant fluvial processes. 2 4