Spatially averaged stratigraphic data to inform watershed sediment routing: An example from the Mid-Atlantic United States

Author:

Pizzuto J.E.1ORCID,Skalak K.J.2,Benthem A.3,Mahan S.A.4,Sherif M.5,Pearson A.J.6

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Earth Sciences, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware 19716, USA

2. 2U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resource Division, 430 National Center, Reston, Virginia 20192, USA

3. 3U.S. Geological Survey, New England Water Sciences Center, Pembroke, New Hampshire 03275, USA

4. 4National Water Quality Laboratory, U.S. Geological Survey, Denver Federal Center, Building 95, Denver, Colorado 80225, USA

5. 5Department of Geology, Faculty of Science, Tanta University, Tanta 31527, Egypt

6. 6Department of Geology, State University of New York at Potsdam, Potsdam, New York 13676, USA

Abstract

Abstract New and previously published stratigraphic data define Holocene to present sediment storage time scales for Mid-Atlantic river corridors. Empirical distributions of deposit ages and thicknesses were randomly sampled to create synthetic age-depth records. Deposits predating European settlement accumulated at a (median) rate of 0.06 cm yr–1, range from ∼18,000 to 225 yr old, and represent 39% (median) of the total accumulation. Sediments deposited from 1750 to 1950 (“legacy sediments”) accumulated at a (median) rate of 0.39 cm yr–1 and comprise 47% (median) of the total, while “modern sediments” (1950–present) represent 11% of the total and accumulated at a (median) rate of 0.25 cm yr–1. Synthetic stratigraphic sequences, recast as age distributions for the presettlement period, in 1900 A.D., and at present, reflect rapid postsettlement alluviation, with enhanced preservation of younger sediments related to postsettlement watershed disturbance. An averaged present age distribution for vertically accreted sediment has modal, median, and mean ages of 190, 230, and 630 yr, reflecting the predominance of stored legacy sediments and the influence of relatively few, much older early Holocene deposits. The present age distribution, if represented by an exponential approximation (mean age ∼300 yr), and naively assumed to represent steady-state conditions, implies median sediment travel times on the order of centuries for travel distances greater than ∼100 km. The percentage of sediment reaching the watershed outlet in 30 yr (a reasonable time horizon to achieve watershed restoration efficacy) is ∼60% for a distance of 50 km, but this decreases to <20% for distances greater than 200 km. Age distributions, evaluated through time, not only encapsulate the history of sediment storage, but they also provide data for calibrating watershed-scale sediment-routing models over geological time scales.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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