Abstract

The region around the coastal Chennai area, India, is drained by three major rivers that rise from the remnants of the Eastern Ghats and receive dominantly the northeast rains. These rivers meander short distances, deposit sediments into the Bay of Bengal and preserve signatures of past phases of sedimentation and incision. In this study, detailed mapping using satellite imageries and extensive field work, logging of the river cliff bank sections was supported by sediment texture and structure and optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) dates. The main objective of this study was to infer the major periods of aggradation and incision in coastal drainage basins receiving dominantly the northeast rains. Integration of all the earlier available dated alluvial sequences (14C ages) and the present study OSL dates reveal that a major period of sedimentation occurred during the early Holocene (9 to 8.3 ka), mid Holocene (7.6–5.5 ka) and late Holocene to recent (2.4 and 1.6 ka, 0.9–0.6 ka and around 0.2 ka) periods. The Koratallaiyar river has preserved older middle Holocene terraces. Younger ages of the south easterly and east flowing rivers such as the Palar and the Coovum signify that they have incised and eroded to the present riverbed levels by catastrophic floods during the late Holocene period. This has resulted in an imbalance between sediment supply and sediment transporting power thus laterally stacking sediments rather than vertically.

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