Abstract

Variability in suspended sediment transport and its relation to erosion processes in two different catchments within the Atna river basin are discussed on the basis of 14 years of data collection. The upper Atna catchment is a headwater system covering 157 km2. Extensive glacifluvial deposits are the main sediment source of the river. Sediment transport in the upper Atna during 1988–2001 ranged from 79.4 t to 13,200 t. The extreme upper value was due to an extreme rainflood in 1996. Suspended sediment concentrations varied from less than 1.0 mg 1-1 to a maximum of 2023.8 mg 1-1. There was no correlation between water discharge and suspended sediment concentration. Despite a fairly constant volume of total runoff, sediment concentrations remained at a high level during the first years after extreme floods, and then decreased over several more years. The complicated pattern of short term and long term variations in suspended sediment concentration and load was explained in terms of channel changes and variations in exposure of the sedimentary deposits to fluvial erosion. The catchment of the lower Atna drains an area of 672 km2. Concentrations of inorganic suspended sediments were found to vary between <1.0 and 897 mg 1-1, with only a weak correlation to water discharge. The suspended sediment transport per year ranged from a minimum value of 574 t in 1991 to 60,651 t per year in 1995, the extreme flood year. The mean annual transport for all the years was 6271 t. The sediment transported in the lower Atna is derived from the same types of sources as in the upper catchment, but the sediments are supplied from a larger area. Grain size distribution analyses indicate that the transported sediments in upper Atna have a sand content of 10 to 65% compared to 2–20% in lower Atna. The transport of particulate organic matter in the upper and lower Atna catchments amounted to 9.8% and 12.6% of the total load, respectively.

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