4.5 Article

Planform-asymmetry and backwater effects on river-cutoff kinematics and clustering

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 46, Issue 2, Pages 357-370

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.5029

Keywords

fluvial; neck; chute; backwater; morphodynamics; Great Basin

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  2. University of Padua
  3. Cariparo foundation

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Meander cutoffs, where a river shortcuts itself and isolates a portion of its course, leave lasting imprints on a river's geometry, stratigraphy, and biogeochemical fluxes. Research on the Humboldt River in Nevada has revealed a correlation between major floods and cutoff incidence, as well as a link between cutoff occurrence and channel sinuosity and planform skewness. The study also suggests that both local and nonlocal perturbations play a role in triggering the clustering of new cutoffs, over distances limited by the backwater length, over yearly to decadal timescales.
River bends occasionally meander to the point of cutoff, whereby a river shortcuts itself and isolates a portion of its course. This fundamental process fingerprints a river's long-term planform geometry, its stratigraphic record, and biogeochemical fluxes in the floodplain. Although meander cutoffs are common in fast-migrating channels, timelapse imagery of the Earth surface typically does not offer a long enough baseline for statistically robust analyses of these processes. We seek to bridge this gap by quantifying cutoff kinematics along the Humboldt River (Nevada) - a stream that, from 1994 to 2019, hosted an exceptionally high number of cutoffs (specifically, 174 of the chute type and 53 of the neck type). A coincidence between major floods and cutoff incidence is first suggestive of hydrographic modulation. Moreover, not just higher sinuosity but also upstream planform skewness is associated with higher cutoff incidence and channel widening for a sub-population of chute cutoffs. We propose a conceptual model to explain our results in terms of channel-flow structure and then examine the distances between adjacent cutoffs to understand the mechanisms governing their clustering. We find that both local and nonlocal perturbations together trigger the clustering of new cutoffs, over distances capped by the backwater length and over yearly to decadal timescales. Our research suggests that planform geometry and backwater controls might sway the occurrence of cutoff clusters - both local and nonlocal - thereby offering new testable hypotheses to explore the evolution of meandering-river landscapes that have significant implications for river engineering and stratigraphic modelling. (c) 2020 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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