Channel change following European settlement: Gilmore Creek, southeastern Australia

被引:23
作者
Page, Ken [1 ]
Frazier, Paul
Pietsch, Timothy
Dehaan, Remy
机构
[1] Univ New England, Sch Human & Environm Studies, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia
[2] Charles Sturt Univ, Inst Land Water & Soc, Bathurst, NSW 2795, Australia
关键词
channel change; avulsion; palaeochannel; OSL dating; catchment modification;
D O I
10.1002/esp.1481
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
European settlement in southeastern Australia led to rapid changes in the morphology of many upland streams. However, our knowledge of the nature of these changes is limited as historical records and preserved palaeochannels are rare. In this study we compare a well-preserved section of the late Holocene palaeochannel of Gilmore Creek to its present channel. We used a combination of map and aerial photograph interpretation, field survey, OSL dating and discharge analysis to describe and compare the modern and palaeochannels and establish a firm date for the timing of channel change. In common with many other streams in southeastern Australia Gilmore Creek's late Holocene channel meandered across a stable well-vegetated and frequently inundated floodplain. After about 1830 European settlers quickly modified the catchment by clearing riparian and hillslope vegetation, introducing grazing animals and other exotic species and mining for alluvial gold in the headwaters. The OSL dates show that between about 1850 and 1880 the small meandering channel aggraded with coarse sands and then up to about I m of silty sand was deposited over the floodplain. Declining sediment input from upstream channel avulsion before 1890 resulted in the establishment of a straighter, larger capacity channel that incised to the level of basal cobbles and, in places, to bedrock. The dramatic change in channel pattern resembles that described on the Cann River in eastern Victoria following the removal of riparian vegetation and within-channel coarse woody debris. At Gilmore Creek increased channel capacity has greatly reduced the average frequency of floodplain inundation. High values of specific stream power suggest that channel morphology is now well adjusted to the present now regime. Copyright (c) 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:1398 / 1411
页数:14
相关论文
共 40 条
[1]  
Aitken M.J., 1998, INTRO OPTICAL DATING
[2]  
*BATL, 2004, NEW S WAL
[3]   European impacts on downstream sediment transfer and bank erosion in Cobargo catchment, New South Wales, Australia [J].
Brierley, GJ ;
Murn, CP .
CATENA, 1997, 31 (1-2) :119-136
[4]   CHANNEL AVULSION AND RIVER METAMORPHOSIS - THE CASE OF THE THOMSON RIVER, VICTORIA, AUSTRALIA [J].
BRIZGA, SO ;
FINLAYSON, BL .
EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 1990, 15 (05) :391-404
[5]   INTERACTIONS BETWEEN UPLAND CATCHMENT AND LOWLAND RIVERS - AN APPLIED AUSTRALIAN CASE-STUDY [J].
BRIZGA, SO ;
FINLAYSON, BL .
GEOMORPHOLOGY, 1994, 9 (03) :189-201
[6]  
Brooks A., 2000, RIVER MANAGEMENT AUS, P221, DOI DOI 10.1111/J.1752-1688.2007.00091.X.NEW
[7]   Geomorphic responses of lower Bega River to catchment disturbance, 1851-1926 [J].
Brooks, AP ;
Brierley, GJ .
GEOMORPHOLOGY, 1997, 18 (3-4) :291-304
[8]   The long-term control of vegetation and woody debris on channel and flood-plain evolution: insights from a paired catchment study in southeastern Australia [J].
Brooks, AP ;
Brierley, GJ ;
Millar, RG .
GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2003, 51 (1-3) :7-29
[9]   Mediated equilibrium: The influence of riparian vegetation and wood on the long-term evolution and behaviour of a near-pristine river [J].
Brooks, AP ;
Brierley, GJ .
EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 2002, 27 (04) :343-367
[10]   Livestock, land cover, and environmental history: The tablelands of New South Wales, Australia, 1820-1920 [J].
Butzer, KW ;
Helgren, DM .
ANNALS OF THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN GEOGRAPHERS, 2005, 95 (01) :80-111