4.6 Article

Landslide-induced river channel avulsions in mountain catchments of southwest New Zealand

Journal

GEOMORPHOLOGY
Volume 63, Issue 1-2, Pages 57-80

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.geomorph.2004.03.005

Keywords

avulsion; river channel; landslide; channel-hillslope coupling; aggradation

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Pulsed or chronic supply of landslide debris to valley floors has historically caused substantial aggradation and channel instability in several alpine catchments of SW New Zealand. In this regional investigation of landslide impacts on river morphology, three types of landslide-induced channel avulsion are discerned: (i) upstream/backwater avulsions, (ii) contact avulsions, and (iii) downstream/loading avulsions. The basis for this qualitative geomorpbic process-response framework is the principal direction of fluvial response with respect to its position relative to the causative landslide emplacement site. Downstream avulsions have the highest damage potential to land use and infrastructure on unconfined mountain-fringe alluvial 2 fans. In the wake of such events, catastrophic aggradation may obliterate up to several km(2) of mature floodplain forests by burial under several metres within a few decades. Estimates of mean aggradation rates are high (<220 mm year(-1)) and exceed long-term (10(3) year) trends of fluvial degradation by an order of magnitude. Future potential avulsion routeways may be detected by geomorphic mapping of abandoned channels, which are preferentially reactivated in the wake of landslide-induced sediment waves. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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