Affiliation:
1. Geography and Environment Loughborough University Loughborough UK
2. School of Geography, Politics and Sociology Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne UK
3. Department of Geography Durham University Durham UK
Abstract
AbstractRapid earth surface evolution is discrete in nature, with short‐duration extreme events having a widespread impact on landscapes despite occurring relatively infrequently. Here, we exploit a unique opportunity to identify the broad, process‐based, controls on sediment production and export during extreme rainfall‐runoff events through a multi‐catchment analysis. A 3 hr extreme rainfall event generated significantly different impacts across three catchments, ranging from (a) sediment export exceeding two orders of magnitude more than the typical long term average to (b) a minimal impact, with this variability primarily controlled by catchment steepness and the presence of reach‐scale morphological transitions caused by postglacial landscape adjustment. In any catchment worldwide where populations are at risk, we highlight the importance of combining topographic analysis with detailed mapping of channel bed material (e.g., presence of transitions between process domains) and identification of sediment sources within morphological transition zones for accurately predicting the impact of extreme events.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics
Cited by
1 articles.
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