Title of article :
Influence of vertical channel change associated with wood accumulations on delineating channel migration zones, Washington, USA
Author/Authors :
Brummer، نويسنده , , Chris J. and Abbe، نويسنده , , Tim B. and Sampson، نويسنده , , Jennifer R. and Montgomery، نويسنده , , David R.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
15
From page :
295
To page :
309
Abstract :
We combine hydraulic modeling and field investigations of logjams to evaluate linkages between wood-mediated fluctuations in channel-bed-and water-surface elevations and the potential for lateral channel migration in forest rivers of Washington state. In the eleven unconfined rivers we investigated, logjams were associated with reduced channel gradient and bank height. Detailed river gauging and hydraulic modeling document significant increases in the water-surface elevation upstream of channel-spanning wood accumulations. Logjams initiated lateral channel migration by increasing bed-or water-surface elevations above adjacent banks. Because the potential for a channel to avulse and migrate across its floodplain increases with the size and volume of instream wood, the area of the valley bottom potentially occupied by a channel over a specified timeframe — the channel migration zone (CMZ) — is dependent on the state of riparian forests. The return of riparian forests afforded by current land management practices will increase the volume and caliber of wood entering Washington rivers to a degree unprecedented since widespread clearing of wood from forests and rivers nearly 150 years ago. A greater supply of wood from maturing riparian forests will increase the frequency and spatial extent of channel migration relative to observations from wood-poor channels in the period of post-European settlement. We propose conceptual guidelines for the delineation of the CMZs that include allowances for vertical fluctuations in channel elevation caused by accumulations of large woody debris.
Keywords :
Channel avulsion , Logjam , Large Woody Debris (LWD) , Channel migration zone (CMZ)
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Record number :
2358973
Link To Document :
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