5 results on '"Makaske, Bart"'
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2. Upstream control of river anastomosis by sediment overloading, upper Columbia River, British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Makaske, Bart, Lavooi, Eva, Haas, Tjalling, Kleinhans, Maarten G., Smith, Derald G., and Manville, Vern
- Subjects
- *
HYDROCARBON reservoirs , *RIVERS , *FLOODPLAIN ecology , *SEDIMENTS , *GEOLOGICAL basins - Abstract
Anastomosing rivers, systems of multiple interconnected channels that enclose floodbasins, constitute a major category of rivers for which various sedimentary facies models have been developed. While the sedimentary products of anastomosing rivers are relatively well-known, their genesis is still debated. A rapidly growing number of ancient alluvial successions being interpreted as of anastomosing river origin, including important hydrocarbon reservoirs, urge the development of robust models for the genesis of anastomosis, to facilitate better interpretation of ancient depositional settings and controls. The upper Columbia River, British Columbia, Canada, is the most-studied anastomosing river and has played a key role in the development of an anastomosing river facies model. Two hypotheses for the origin of upper Columbia River anastomosis include the following: (i) downstream control by aggrading cross-valley alluvial fans; and (ii) upstream control by excessive bedload input from tributaries. Both upstream and downstream control may force aggradation and avulsions in the upper Columbia River. In order to test both hypotheses, long-term (millennia-scale) floodplain sedimentation rates and avulsion frequencies are calculated using 14C-dated deeply buried organic floodplain material from cross-valley borehole transects. The results indicate a downstream decrease in floodplain sedimentation rate and avulsion frequency along the anastomosed reach, which is consistent with dominant upstream control by sediment overloading. The data here link recent avulsion activity to increased sediment supply during the Little Ice Age ( ca 1100 to 1950 ad). This link is supported by data showing that sediment supply to the upper Columbia study reach fluctuated in response to Holocene glacial advances and retreats in the hinterland. Upstream control of anastomosis has considerable implications for the reconstruction of the setting of interpreted ancient anastomosing systems. The present research underscores that anastomosing systems typically occur in relatively proximal settings with abundant sediment supplied to low-gradient floodplains, a situation commonly found in intermontane and foreland basins. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Reconstruction of eroded and deposited sediment volumes of the embanked River Waal, the Netherlands, for the period ad 1631-present.
- Author
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Hobo, Noortje, Makaske, Bart, Wallinga, Jakob, and Middelkoop, Hans
- Subjects
RIVERS ,SEDIMENTS ,EMBANKMENTS ,FLOODPLAIN ecology ,GEOMORPHOLOGICAL mapping ,STRATIGRAPHIC geology ,OPTICALLY stimulated luminescence dating - Abstract
ABSTRACT In the last few centuries humans have modified rivers, and rivers have responded with noticeable changes in sedimentary dynamics. The objective of this study is to assess these responses of the sedimentary dynamics. Therefore, we calculated a sediment budget for eroded and deposited sediment volumes in a ~12-km long floodplain section of the largest semi-natural embanked but still dynamic lower Rhine distributary, for ~50-years time slices between ad 1631 and present. This is the period during which embanked floodplains were formed by downstream migration of meander bends between confining dykes. Our sediment budget involves a detailed reconstruction of vertical and lateral accretion rates and erosion rates of floodplain sediment. To do so, we developed a series of historical geomorphological maps, and lithogenetic cross-sections. Based on the maps and cross-sections, we divided the floodplain into building blocks representing channel bed and overbank sediment bodies. Chronostratigraphy within the blocks was estimated by interpretation of heavy metal profiles and from optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dating results. Sediment budgets were hence calculated as a change of volume of each building block between time steps. The amount of lateral accretion initially increased, as a result of island and sand bar formation following embankment. From the eighteenth century onwards, there was a decrease of lateral processes in time, which is a result of straightening of the river by human activities, and a reduction of water and sediment supply due to the construction of a new upstream bifurcation. With straightening of the river, the floodplain area grew. Artificial fixation of the channel banks after ad 1872 prevented lateral activity. From then on, overbank deposition became the main process, leading to a continuous increase of floodplain elevation, and inherent decrease of flooding frequency and sediment accumulation rate. Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Upstream and downstream controls of recent avulsions on the Taquari megafan, Pantanal, south-western Brazil.
- Author
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Makaske, Bart, Maathuis, Ben H. P., Padovani, Carlos R., Stolker, Chris, Mosselman, Erik, and Jongman, Rob H. G.
- Subjects
FLOODPLAINS ,DELTAS ,REMOTE sensing ,SEDIMENTS - Abstract
ABSTRACT Avulsion, the natural relocation of a river, is a key process in the evolution of subaerial fans, river floodplains and deltas. The causes of avulsion are poorly understood, which is partly due to the scarcity of field studies of present avulsions. At present, two avulsions are occurring on the middle and lower Taquari megafan, Pantanal basin, south-western Brazil. Here we present an analysis of the causes of these avulsions based on field and remote sensing data and show that avulsions on megafans can be controlled by both upstream and downstream processes. The middle fan avulsion (started in 1997-1998) is a result of upstream control: overbank aggradation was caused by the (variable) input of sandy sediment into the system, which caused channel-belt superelevation and also created an easily erodible subsurface favouring bank retreat, crevassing, and scour of deep floodplain channels. The sandy subsurface in this area is inferred to have been a major factor in the causation of this avulsion under conditions of little gradient advantage. The lower fan avulsion (started c. 1990) results from interplay of upstream and downstream controls, the latter being related to the local base level (the Paraguay River floodplain) at the toe of the fan. Channel and overbank aggradation on the lower fan was influenced by fan sub-lobe progradation and channel backfilling. Fan sub-lobe progradation caused a significant gradient advantage of the avulsion channel over the parent channel. Avulsions are commonly supposed to be preferentially triggered by high-magnitude floods, when there is considerable channel-belt superelevation. However, both avulsions studied by us were triggered by small to average floods, with modest channel-belt superelevation. We conclude that flood magnitude and channel-belt superelevation have been overrated as causes of avulsion, and demonstrate additional causes that influence the growth of crevasses into avulsions. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Reconstruction of floodplain sedimentation rates: a combination of methods to optimize estimates.
- Author
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Hobo, Noortje, Makaske, Bart, Middelkoop, Hans, and Wallinga, Jakob
- Subjects
FLOODPLAIN management ,LANDSCAPES ,DISCHARGE of ballast water ,SEDIMENTS ,RIVER channels - Abstract
The article discusses the landscaping measures in a dynamic floodplain management strategy in Rhine River, Netherlands. It states that its aim is to increase the discharging capacity of the river by taking out the sediment from the floodplain by lowering floodplains and digging secondary channels. It also mentions that the differences of sedimentation rates can be determined through applied methods that may rise from change of sedimentation rate.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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