Linking mid-scale distributive fluvial systems to drainage basin area: geomorphological and sedimentological evidence from the endorheic Gastre Basin, Argentina

2016 ◽  
Vol 440 (1) ◽  
pp. 265-279 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andres Bilmes ◽  
Gonzalo D. Veiga
1999 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 1267-1280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Church ◽  
Darren Ham ◽  
Marwan Hassan ◽  
Olav Slaymaker

This report presents a set of maps of regional fluvial sediment yield in Canada, based mainly on the Water Survey of Canada archive of riverine suspended sediment observations. Regional scaling relations for the variation of suspended sediment load with drainage basin area are established to permit data to be adjusted to common areal bases for portrayal of regional variations. For most regions, the specific sediment yield increases downstream, indicating regional degradation of river valleys. In the southern prairies, however, regional aggradation is occurring, and in southern Ontario similar quantities of fluvial sediment are apparently being yielded, on average, over all scales in the landscape. A smoothed regional portrayal of the results is obtained by kriging, which also yields error estimates for locally predicted values of sediment yield. Maps are presented for the standard areas of 1 km2, 102 km2 (10 km × 10 km), and 104 km2 (102 km × 102 km).


2006 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 129-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Apaydin ◽  
F. Ozturk ◽  
H. Merdun ◽  
N.M. Aziz

Detailed geomorphologic characteristics need to be compiled for performing hydrologic modeling of a basin. Basin form and hydrologic characteristics are to be related so the basin form must also be represented by quantitative descriptors. The typical morphologic characteristics used in hydrological analyses are basin area, perimeter, mainstream length, total stream length, contour length, basin shape (form factor, circularity ratio, compactness ratio, basin elongation), slope, drainage density, relief (maximum relief, relief ratio, relative relief), effective basin width, and median elevation. The objective of this study is to propose an algorithm to automatically calculate basin characteristics using vector GIS. The results produced by the algorithm were compared to the manual method and the two methods were found statistically similar.


2001 ◽  
Vol 58 (7) ◽  
pp. 1286-1299 ◽  
Author(s):  
E E Prepas ◽  
D Planas ◽  
J J Gibson ◽  
D H Vitt ◽  
T D Prowse ◽  
...  

A review of headwater lakes in undisturbed watersheds on the Boreal Plain, with indirect gradient analyses of chemical data, indicated a clear separation between those in wetland-dominated watersheds (57–100% wetland with variable proportions of bog, fen, swamp, and marsh cover) and those in upland-dominated watersheds (0–44% wetland cover). In the former, percentage wetland cover in the watershed was positively correlated with total phosphorus (TP, r2 = 0.78, primarily bog), total nitrogen (TN, r2 = 0.50), and dissolved organic carbon (DOC, r2 = 0.74) concentrations. Rich fens appeared to sequester both TP and TN. In upland-dominated lakes, the ratio of catchment area to lake volume (CA/LV) was the strongest watershed correlate of TP concentration (r2 = 0.56), whereas most limnetic nitrogen and DOC were generated in situ. Colour concentration, being highest in wetland lakes, was correlated with the ratio of isotopically defined effective drainage basin area to lake volume (eDBA/LV, r2 = 0.63). Drainage basin slope was only weakly associated with water quality, likely because of low topographic relief ([Formula: see text]11%). Higher Chlorophyta and Peridineae biomasses in wetland-dominated systems than in upland-dominated ones may coincide with greater NH4+ availability.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefano Segadelli ◽  
Federico Grazzini ◽  
Margherita Aguzzi ◽  
Alessandro Chelli ◽  
Veronica Rossi ◽  
...  

Abstract. Several record-breaking precipitation events have stricken the mountainous area of Emilia-Romagna Region (northern Apennines, Italy) over the last years. As consequence, several geomorphological processes, like widespread debris flows along the slopes and hyperconcentrated flood in the stream channels, shallow landslides and overbank flooding affected the territory, causing serious damages to man-made structures. The intensity and wide spatial scale of these phenomena leads us to investigate their frequency in the past, beyond the instrumental time. A detailed study of these recent deposits compared with fossil peat bog and lake paleodeposits can provide useful insight to support a strong match between precipitation intensity and warm climatic phases in antecedent climatic periods, as expected by the increase air water vapour holding capacity at higher temperatures. Here we present the results of the field campaign performed in summer 2017 at Lake Moo a 0.15 km2 peat bog located at an altitude of 1130 m a.s.l. The chosen area has been affected, during the flooding of the upper Trebbia and Nure valleys 13–14 September 2015, by several high-density flows generated by the stream that flow into the plain. Our main assumption is that, in such a small drainage basin (area


Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan D. Paul

A database of 3023 river basins in Africa was assembled to investigate the relative effects of uplift and erosion on landscape development. The volume of rock eroded from each basin was calculated by integrating the difference between a topographic summit envelope fit across drainage divides and interfluves, and present-day topography over basin area. Africa is an excellent natural laboratory for this procedure because drainage patterns reflect the Neogene development of topographic basins and swells, themselves surficial manifestations of sub-lithospheric mantle convection. As a result, the loci of major offshore deltas and drainage divides have remained largely static, while epeirogenic (vertical) surface motions are more important than shortening. Eroded rock volume is presented as a proxy for fluvial incision and correlates strongly with long-wavelength gravity anomalies across Africa, but not with mean precipitation, which was calculated by merging satellite estimates with rain gauge data. This finding implies that spatial variations in epeirogenic uplift govern landscape evolution across the continent. Other variables that alter drainage basin geometry and the magnitude of eroded rock volumes, such as varying climate, bedrock erodibility, and drainage capture, are likely subordinate to these variations. First-order estimates of eroded rock volume onshore are potentially the most accurate indicator of offshore sedimentation because they implicitly include information pertaining to basin area and relief, which together control sediment load.


2007 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 155-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joris de Vente ◽  
Jean Poesen ◽  
Mahmood Arabkhedri ◽  
Gert Verstraeten

Understanding the sediment delivery process at the drainage basin scale remains a challenge in erosion and sedimentation research. In the absence of reliable spatially distributed process-based models for the prediction of sediment transport at the drainage basin scale, area-specific sediment yield (SSY; t km—2 y—1) is often assumed to decrease with increasing drainage basin area (A). As the measurement of A is relatively simple, this assumption is frequently used for prediction of SSY in ungauged basins. However, over the last two decades several studies reported a positive or non-linear relation between A and SSY. Various authors have suggested diverse explanations for these opposing trends. This paper provides an overview of the different observed trends and summarizes the explanations for each trend. Furthermore, three typical trends are identified to conceptualize the main driving forces of the relation between A and SSY. First of all, it is emphasized that erosion and sediment deposition processes are scale dependent, and going from small (<m2) to larger areas (km2) more erosion processes become active leading to a rise in SSY with increasing A. However, for larger areas (>km2) erosion rates generally decrease and deposition in sediment sinks increases due to decreasing slope gradients, and so SSY decreases with increasing A. Next, land-cover conditions and human impact determine if hillslope erosion is dominant over channel erosion or vice versa. In the first case, SSY is expected to decrease with increasing A, while in the latter case SSY will show a continuous positive relation with A. Only for very large areas (A > ~104 km2) a decrease in SSY is observed when drainage density decreases or channel banks are stabilized. Finally, spatial patterns in lithology, land cover, climate or topography can cause SSY to increase or decrease at any basin area and can therefore result in non-linear relations with A. Altogether, with increasing A often first a rise and then a decrease in SSY is observed. The decrease can be absent or can be postponed within a region due to local factors of which lithology, land cover, climate and topography are the most important ones. The large regional, local and even temporal variability in the trend between A and SSY implies that prediction of SSY based on A alone is troublesome and preferably spatially distributed information on land use, climate, lithology, topography and dominant erosion processes is required.


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