Landscape evolution, valley excavation, and terrace development following abrupt postglacial base-level fall
Author(s) -
Karen B. Gran,
N. J. Finnegan,
Andrew L. A. Johnson,
Patrick Belmont,
Chad Wittkop,
Tammy M. Rittenour
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
geological society of america bulletin
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.197
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1943-2674
pISSN - 0016-7606
DOI - 10.1130/b30772.1
Subject(s) - geology , terrace (agriculture) , bedrock , geomorphology , glacial period , fluvial , glacier , lithology , streams , physical geography , archaeology , paleontology , computer network , structural basin , computer science , geography , history
Many high-latitude fluvial systems are adjusting to base-level changes since the last glaciation. Channels that experienced base-level fall may still be incising, often through glacial diamictons (tills). These tills can be quite competent, behaving more like weak bedrock than unconsolidated sediment, and erode at a fast pace, thus providing a unique opportunity to test models of channel incision and knickpoint migration in transient systems. Here, we integrate light detection and ranging (LiDAR) topography, strath terrace chronology, and numerical modeling to determine knickpoint migration and incision history of the Le Sueur River in central Minnesota, USA. Results indicate that the Le Sueur River is best modeled as a detachment-limited channel, with downstream coarsening related to lag clasts from tills playing a critical factor in longitudinal profile development. The Le Sueur River meanders as it incises, so we coupled the best-fit incision model to a meander model to determine valley excavation history. The excavation history was used to determine a natural background erosion rate, prior to land-use changes associated with settlement and agricultural expansion in the mid-1800s. We compared background fine sediment (silt and clay) erosion rates with historic decadal-average annual suspended loads. Results show that modern fine sediment contributions from sources associated with valley excavation are three times higher than modeled presettlement loads. Recent changes in hydrology associated with land use and climate change have increased flows in rivers, leading to higher sediment loads, not just from field erosion, but from increased bank and bluff erosion in the deeply incised valleys.
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