CHANNEL CHANGE AND FLOOD EVENTS SINCE 1783 ON THE REGULATED RIVER TAY, SCOTLAND - IMPLICATIONS FOR FLOOD HAZARD MANAGEMENT

被引:42
作者
GILVEAR, DJ
WINTERBOTTOM, SJ
机构
[1] Department of Environmental Science, University of Stirling, Stirling
来源
REGULATED RIVERS-RESEARCH & MANAGEMENT | 1992年 / 7卷 / 03期
关键词
FLOODS; CHANNEL CHANGE; EMBANKMENTS; IMPOUNDMENT;
D O I
10.1002/rrr.3450070304
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
An analysis of old maps and documentary sources reveals that major changes in river channel planform have occurred over the last 200 years on the River Tay system, Scotland, UK. Reaches showing natural river channel planform change, however, are relatively small and a stable planform is characteristic of many sections of the river. River planform instability appears to be controlled by channel bed slope, sediment load and the enhanced vulnerability of former river channel courses to erosion. Flood protection embankments built in the 19th and 20th centuries modified unstable multichannel wandering gravel bed river sections to narrower single-channel reaches, with limited lateral migration. On the River Tummel, 20th century impoundment has caused further geomorphological change in response to clearwater erosion close to the dam and aggradation processes within the regulated river downstream, but isolation of the effects of impoundment from those of channelization are problematic. An examination of the geomorphic effects of a high magnitude flood event in 1990 and historical accounts of earlier large floods reveal that the 1990 flood was the third largest since 1800 in the study area. Despite river regulation and bank protection the zones naturally characterized by instability are still susceptible to planform changes causing flood embankments to be breached, channel shifts and development of gravel bars.
引用
收藏
页码:247 / 260
页数:14
相关论文
共 35 条
  • [1] Babtie, (1990)
  • [2] Bates G.F., The evolution of a haughland, as illustrated in the camping‐ground of the Boys' Brigade at Ballinluig, Proc. Perthshire Soc. Nat. Sci., 6, pp. 4-12, (1906)
  • [3] Bremner A., The late glacial geology of the Tay Basin from Pass of Birnam to Grandtully and Pitlochry, Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, 13, pp. 473-483, (1939)
  • [4] Brookes A., River channelisation: traditional engineering methods, physical consequences and alternative practices, Prog. Phys. Geogr., 9, pp. 44-73, (1985)
  • [5] Church M.A., Pattern of instability in a wandering gravel‐bed channel, Spec. Pub. Assoc. Sedimentol., 6, pp. 169-180, (1983)
  • [6] Church M.A., Slaymaker O., Ten thousand year disequilibrium of fluvial sediment yield in glaciated British Columbia, Nature, 337, pp. 452-454, (1989)
  • [7] Desloges J.R., Church M.A., Wandering gravel‐bed rivers, Can. Geogr., 33, pp. 361-364, (1989)
  • [8] Dunne T., Geomorphic contributions to flood control planning, Flood Geomorphology, pp. 421-438, (1988)
  • [9] Ferguson R.I., Werrity A., pp. 181-193, (1983)
  • [10] Fortune M., Historical changes of a large river in an urban area: the Garonne River, Toulouse, France, Regulated Rivers: Research & Management, 2, pp. 179-186, (1988)