Abstract

In the tectonically stable rivers of eastern Australia, changes in response to sediment supply and flow regime are likely driven by both regional climatic (allogenic) factors and intrinsic (autogenic) geomorphic controls. Contentious debate has ensued as to which is the dominant factor in the evolution of valley floors and the formation of late Quaternary terraces preserved along many coastal streams. Preliminary chronostratigraphic data from river terraces along four streams in subtropical Southeast Queensland (SEQ), Australia, indicate regionally synchronous terrace abandonment between 7.5–10.8 ka. All optically stimulated luminescence ages are within 1σ error and yield a mean age of incision at 9.24 ± 0.93 ka. Limited samples of the upper parts of the inset floodplains from three of the four streams yield near-surface ages of 600–500 years. Terrace sediments consist of vertically accreted fine sandy silts to cohesive clays, while top stratum of the floodplains are comprised of clay loams to fine-medium sands. The inundation frequency of these alluvial surfaces depends on their specific valley setting. In narrow valley settings, where floodplains comprise <5% of the valley floor, terraces are inundated between the 20 and 50-year annual exceedance probability (AEP) flood, while in wide settings (floodplains >20%), the terraces are no longer inundated. Floodplain inundation frequencies also vary between these settings by an order of magnitude between 5- to 50-year AEP, respectively. The correlation of terrace abandonment within SEQ with fluvial and palaeoenvironmental records elsewhere in the subtropics, and more broadly across eastern Australia, are an indication that terrace abandonment has primarily been driven by climatic forcing. Contemporaneous channel incision in the early Holocene may have been driven by an increasingly warmer and wetter environment in SEQ, with a climate commensurate with the delivery of more extreme weather events. Following channel incision, many streams in SEQ have been largely confined to their entrenched “macrochannel” form that remains preserved within the valley floor.

Highlights

  • River terraces typically form due to tectonic or climatic controls but can develop due to intrinsic factors [1,2,3], as well as direct or indirect human disturbances [4,5]

  • This study presented a preliminary regional terrace chronology for subtropical Southeast Queensland (SEQ), Australia

  • The results indicated a synchronous response of early Holocene channel incision and terrace abandonment that likely reflected large-scale climatic changes in eastern Australia

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Summary

Introduction

River terraces typically form due to tectonic or climatic controls but can develop due to intrinsic factors (within-system changes, such as slope threshold exceedance, channel avulsion, or stream capture) [1,2,3], as well as direct or indirect human disturbances [4,5]. Quaternary 2018, 1, 23 channel, preserved over millennia [6,7]. Even in such settings, climatic controls can remain critical factors that cause subsequent incision [8]. Aggradation is initiated during glacial cycles and pronounced channel incision occurs during the subsequent deglacial (warming) phase.

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