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Holocene flooding and river development in a Mediterranean steepland catchment: The Anapodaris Gorge, south central Crete, Greece

Authors :
Stephen Tooth
Mark G. Macklin
Geoffrey A. T. Duller
P. L. Noble
Paul Brewer
Source :
Global and Planetary Change. 70:35-52
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2010.

Abstract

Many Mediterranean steepland rivers are flanked by extensive alluvial and colluvial deposits, but Late Quaternary histories of channel and hillslope behaviour remain poorly constrained, primarily because of the limited availability of material suitable for dating. Study of a 4.8 km long reach of the Anapodaris Gorge, located in the lower part of an � 500 km 2 catchment in south central Crete, reveals a succession of well preserved, coarse-grained (predominantly cobble to boulder) and fine-grained (predominantly silt to sand) alluvial deposits that locally interfinger with, or are overlain by, coarse colluvial and tributary stream deposits. Detailed ground surveys, geomorphological mapping, sedimentological investigations, and geochronology (optically stimulated luminescence, radiocarbon, and lichenometry) have allowed detailed reconstruction of the timing and pattern of sedimentation and erosion over the mid to late Holocene. Widespread, coarse-grained aggradational episodes at c. 4.86-4.20 and c. 3.40-3.00 ka have been punctuated by incisional episodes and coarse sediment export, resulting in a suite of alluvial terraces. Comparison with other proxy Mediterranean environmental change records, particularly high-resolution marine and lake records, suggests that these aggradational/incisional episodes were primarily climatically driven, reflecting changes in the balance between hillslope/tributary sediment supply and high-energy flood events. By contrast, phases of widespread fine-grained aggradation at c. 1.90 ka, 1.13 to 1.10 ka, 0.85 to 0.70 ka and 0.21 ka provide evidence for decreases in flood competence, possibly coupled with up-catchment historical land use changes. Since the middle of the nineteenth century, several large floods have formed localised boulder berms and splays and have contributed to stripping of the fine-grained deposits from many parts of the gorge. The findings from the Anapodaris Gorge demonstrate the sensitivity of Mediterranean steepland catchments to rapid and/or short-lived Holocene climate change but also highlight the need for higher resolution data on historical and prehistoric land use changes. © 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
09218181
Volume :
70
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Global and Planetary Change
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0543e50d2af54127bf6c1d2167713424
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2009.11.006