Back to Search Start Over

Long-term evolution of the Old Rhine estuary: unraveling effects of changing boundary conditions and inherited landscape

Authors :
de Haas, T.
Van der Valk, B.
Cohen, K.M.
Pierik, H.J.
Weisscher, S.A.H.
Hijma, M.P.
van der Spek, A.
Kleinhans, M.G.
Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change
Landdegradatie en aardobservatie
Landscape functioning, Geocomputation and Hydrology
Geomorfologie
Biogeomorphology of Rivers and Estuaries
Coastal dynamics, Fluvial systems and Global change
Landdegradatie en aardobservatie
Landscape functioning, Geocomputation and Hydrology
Geomorfologie
Biogeomorphology of Rivers and Estuaries
Source :
The Depositional Record, 5(1). John Wiley and Sons Inc., The depositional record, 2019, Vol.5(1), pp.84-108 [Peer Reviewed Journal], The Depositional Record
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The long‐term morphodynamic evolution of estuaries depends on a combination of antecedent topography and boundary conditions, including fluvial input, sea‐level change and regional‐landscape interactions. Identifying effects of such boundary conditions on estuary evolution is important to anticipate future changes in specific boundary conditions and for hindcasting with numerical and physical models. A comprehensive synthesis of the evolution of the former Old Rhine estuary is presented here, together with its boundary conditions over its full lifespan from 6,500 to 1,000 cal. yr bp. This system formed during a period of sea‐level high stand, during which the estuary served as the main River Rhine outlet. The estuary went through three stages of evolution: a maturation phase in a wide infilling back‐barrier basin, a stable mature phase and an abandoning phase, both in a laterally confined setting. The Old Rhine River formed by a river avulsion around 6,500 cal. yr bp that connected to a tidal channel within a large back‐barrier basin. Decelerating sea‐level rise caused the back‐barrier basin to silt up around 5,700 cal. yr bp, resulting in shoreline progradation by beach‐barrier formation until ∼2,000 cal. yr bp. Beach‐barrier formation along the coast and natural levee formation along the river triggered peat formation in the coastal plain, laterally constraining the estuary and limiting overbank deposition, which caused most sediment to accumulate offshore. The abandoning phase started around 2,200 cal. yr bp when a series of upstream avulsions led to a substantial reduction in fluvial input. This induced a period of enhanced estuarine overbank clay deposition that continued into near‐complete silting up and estuary closure around 1200 ad. These findings exemplify how tidal systems, formed in wide coastal plains during sea‐level high stand, depend on antecedent conditions, and how they respond to connection and disconnection of a large river over long, millennial timescales.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20554877
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Depositional Record, 5(1). John Wiley and Sons Inc., The depositional record, 2019, Vol.5(1), pp.84-108 [Peer Reviewed Journal], The Depositional Record
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....263780f9e78d4754219bd5ae13faf04e