4.5 Article

Mediated equilibrium: The influence of riparian vegetation and wood on the long-term evolution and behaviour of a near-pristine river

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 343-367

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/esp.332

Keywords

riparian vegetation; human impacts; woody debris; Australian rivers; Holocene evolution; sedimentology; equilibrium

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Analysis of the contemporary geomorphology, vegetation and in-channel wood Within the relatively pristine Thurra River in southeastern Australia provides insight into river behaviour prior to European disturbance. This sand-bed river has an extremely low channel capacity with a pronounced pool-riffle morphology. Lateral migration rates are low (11-24 mm a(-1)), as are floodplain aggradation rates (average = 0.27 rum a(-1)). Sedimentological evidence is used to place contemporary channel dynamics within a 16 ka evolutionary framework. The floodplain has continuously aggraded over this interval, despite a number of avulsions and numerous meander cutoffs. Avulsions occur on a timeframe of once in 5 ka or more, while cutoffs occur around once in I ka. The morphology and evolution of the Thurra River are appraised in terms of a mediated equilibrium condition, in which channel capacity, hydraulics, bedload transport rates, bank erosion rates and in-channel deposition are substantially influenced by vegetation and wood within the channel and on the floodplain. Copyright (C) 2002 John Wiley Sons, Ltd.

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