Rivers in reverse: Upstream-migrating dechannelization and flooding cause avulsions on fluvial fans

Author:

Edmonds Douglas A.1,Martin Harrison K.1,Valenza Jeffery M.1,Henson Riley1,Weissmann Gary S.2,Miltenberger Keely2,Mans Wade2,Moore Jason R.3,Slingerland Rudy L.4,Gibling Martin R.5,Bryk Alexander B.6,Hajek Elizabeth A.4

Affiliation:

1. Indiana University, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, 1001 E. 10 Street, Bloomington, Indiana 47405-1405, USA

2. University of New Mexico, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, MSC 03 2040, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131-0001, USA

3. University of New Mexico, Honors College, MSC 06 3890, 1 University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87131-0001, USA

4. Pennsylvania State University, Department of Geosciences, Deike Building, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA

5. Dalhousie University, Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, 1459 Oxford Street, P.O. Box 15000, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4R2, Canada

6. Department of Earth and Planetary Science, 307 McCone Hall, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-4767, USA

Abstract

Abstract The process of river avulsion builds floodplains and fills alluvial basins. We report on a new style of river avulsion identified in the Landsat satellite record. We found 69 examples of retrogradational avulsions on rivers of densely forested fluvial fans in the Andean and New Guinean alluvial basins. Retrogradational avulsions are initiated by a channel blockage, e.g., a logjam, that fills the channel with sediment and forces water overbank (dechannelization), which creates a chevron-shaped flooding pattern. Dechannelization waves travel upstream at a median rate of 387 m/yr and last on average for 13 yr; many rivers show multiple dechannelizing events on the same reach. Dechannelization ends and the avulsion is complete when the river finds a new flow path. We simulate upstream-migrating dechannelization with a one-dimensional morphodynamic model for open channel flow. Observations are consistent with model results and show that channel blockages can cause dechannelization on steep (10−2 to 10−3), low-discharge (~101 m3 s−1) rivers. This illustrates a new style of floodplain sedimentation that is unaccounted for in ecologic and stratigraphic models.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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