4.7 Article

Geochemical tracing and spatial evolution of the sediment bed load of the Romaine River, Quebec, Canada

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CATENA
卷 81, 期 1, 页码 66-76

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2010.01.005

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Geochemical tracing; Bed load; Romaine River; Fluvial transport; Holocene evolution; Sediment connectivity

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A four-reservoir hydroelectric complex which is projected on the Romaine River, in eastern Quebec, Canada, will likely lead to the complete settling of the sand-size bed load of the river. In order to characterise the present river bed load sources, sediment transport and sedimentary connectivity, a study was conducted to document the compositional continuum of the lower 300 km portion of the river. Bed load samples were collected during the late summer low water period and ICP-MS geochemical analyses of the light and heavy mineral portions were conducted. Principal component analysis of the results successfully identified a series of distinctive geochemical domains. Multivariate Euclidean distance coefficients were also calculated between consecutive samples along the river revealing major bed load compositional breaks. These results indicate a longitudinal fractionation of the bed load along the 300 km course of the river. This is further supported by the sedimentary budget calculated from the annual sedimentary input derived from erosion rates of the river banks, from sediment bed load measurements at three gauging stations and from calculated bed load transport capacity at these three locations. It appears that significant sediment accommodation space is available on the upper course (250 km) of the Romaine River, in spite of the fact that this river has drained highly sediment-laden meltwaters from the receding Laurentide Ice Sheet, some 10 ka ago. This accommodation space leads to the renewal of the bed load due to recurrent partial to complete sedimentation. The major part of the bed load reaching the Romaine River mouth originates from the lower 50 km of the river course. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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