Quaternary (May 2024)

Prolonged Response of River Terrace Flooding to Climate Change

  • Jef Vandenberghe,
  • Xianyan Wang,
  • Xun Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/quat7020023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 2
p. 23

Abstract

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From the start of river incision onward, the abandoned terrace surface is only reached by floods during peak discharges. Two main flood facies are distinguished: a relatively high-energetic, coarse-grained facies and a relatively low-energetic, fine-grained facies. In general, the flood deposits become gradually finer-grained and the finer-grained facies relatively more prominent when the river incises progressively deeper. This signifies a delayed and prolonged effect of channel incision and flood deposition compared with the climate changes that initiated the incision. However, these long-term trends may be interrupted by shorter-term events of flooding or non-deposition. Those short events are expressed by cycles of coarse-grained deposits from small/shallow flooding channels due to short peak discharges or fine-grained suspended sediment and incipient soils during periods of low flow. These short events may be attributed to short climatic episodes or intermittent intrinsic river evolution.

Keywords