Title of article :
Fluvial response to large rock-slope failures: Examples from the Himalayas, the Tien Shan, and the Southern Alps in New Zealand
Author/Authors :
Korup، نويسنده , , Oliver and Strom، نويسنده , , Alexander L. and Weidinger، نويسنده , , Johannes T.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Abstract :
We describe remnants of large (107–1010 m3) Late Pleistocene to Holocene rockslides and rock avalanches that block(ed) rivers and are preserved in the Himalayas, the Tien Shan, and the New Zealand Southern Alps despite rates of uplift and erosion of up to 10 mm year− 1. These natural dams control fluvial response on 101–104 year timescales by (a) storing and releasing sediment during forced alluviation and fluvial re-incision; (b) relocating river channels through diversion or seepage; (c) inhibiting river erosion into bedrock; (d) forming persistent long-profile knickpoints and knickslopes associated with steep high-energy (> 103 W m− 2) breach and epigenetic bypass gorges and fluvial hanging valleys; and (e) shaping valley-floor morphology. Sediments indicate that rockslide-dammed lakes may persist up to 104 years, before being drained or infilled. Several short-lived (100–102 year) historical rockslide dams in the Indian and Nepal Himalayas and the Southern Alps have had marked volumetric impacts on catchment sediment budgets shortly following failure. Therefore, we caution against the linear extrapolation of sediment delivery from prehistoric rockslide dams through time as a response variable. We find reach-scale changes to channel gradient to be prominent and persistent indicators of fluvial response to large rock-slope failures.
Keywords :
Landslide Dam , Fluvial response , River long profile , Sediment yield , Mountain geomorphology
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Journal title :
Geomorphology