Abstract

There are frequently interactions between active folds and major rivers (mean annual water discharges > 70 m3s−1). The major river may incise across the fold, to produce a water gap across the fold, or a bevelling (or lateral planation) of the top of the fold. Alternatively, the major river may be defeated to produce a diversion of the river around the fold, with wind gaps forming across the fold in some cases, or ponding of the river behind the fold. Why a river incises or diverts is often unclear, though influential characteristics and processes have been identified. A new scheme for investigating fold-river interactions has been devised, involving a short description of the major river, climate, and structural geology, and 13 characteristics of river and fold geomorphology: (1) Channel width at location of fold axis, w, (2) Channel-belt width at location of fold axis, cbw, (3) Floodplain width at location of fold axis, fpw, (4) Channel sinuosity, Sc, (5) Braiding index, BI, (6) General river course direction, RCD, (7) Distance from fold core to location of river crossing, C-RC, (8) Distance from fold core to river basin margin, C-BM, (9) Width of geological structure at location of river crossing, Wgs, (10) Estimate of erosion resistance of surface sediments/rocks and deeper sediments/rocks in fold, ERs, ERd, (11) Channel water surface slope at location of fold axis, s, (12) Average channel migration rate, Rm, (13) Estimate of fold total uplift rate, TUR. The first 10 geomorphological characteristics should be readily determinable for almost all major rivers using widely available satellite imagery and fine scale geological maps. This use of remote sensing allows a large number of major rivers to be investigated relatively easily, including those in remote or inaccessible areas, without recourse to expensive fieldwork. The last three geomorphological characteristics should be determinable for most major rivers where other data sources are available. This study demonstrates the methodology of this scheme, using the example of the major rivers Karun and Dez interacting with active folds in the foreland basin tectonic setting of lowland south-west Iran. For the rivers Karun and Dez (mean annual water discharges 575 m3s−1 and 230 m3s−1, respectively), it was found that geomorphological characteristics Nos. 2, 3 and 7 had statistically significant differences (p-value ≤ 0.05) between the categories of river incision across a fold and river diversion around a fold. This scheme should be used to investigate a variety of major rivers from across the globe. By comparing the same parameters for different major rivers, a better understanding of fold-river interactions will be achieved.

Highlights

  • Interpreting the interactions between rivers and tectonics can be challenging

  • This study has introduced and demonstrated a new scheme using remote sensing for investigating fold-river interactions for major rivers

  • The scheme was successfully applied to the major rivers Karun and Dez in lowland south-west Iran, using widely available satellite imagery and fine scale geological maps

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Interpreting the interactions between rivers and tectonics can be challenging. Principally, this is because rivers are inherently variable and complex, influenced by a wide range of both autogenic factors that include topography, hydrology and sedimentology, and allogenic factors that include structural geology and active tectonics, plus human activities, climate and relative sea-level (or base level) changes [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]. For major rivers, with mean annual water discharges of 70 m3s−1 or more [10], interacting with active folds over horizontal spatial scales of metres to tens of kilometres (river channel dimensions to fold dimensions), the difficulties are lessened, especially at locations upstream of coastal plain-valleys [11,12,13] This is because for a single major river at such scales, climate and rates of sediment supply from the basin hinterland are likely to be similar, as climate zones typically extend over scales of hundreds of kilometres [14,15,16], and upstream of the extent of the backwater length (typically a distance of more than 150 km from the shoreline) the influences of relative sea-level changes are likely to be minimal [12,17,18]. At these river reach scales, the significant allogenic factors will be limited to tectonics and human activities, with prominent human impacts being limited to the last few millennia [13,19,20,21]

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call