The processes and timing of sediment delivery from headwaters to the trunk stream of a Central European mountain gully catchment

Annegret Larsen*, Hans Rudolf Bork, Alexander Fuelling, Markus Fuchs, Joshua R. Larsen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Gully systems determine downstream water quality and sediment loads since they are located where streams begin. They are often only considered as a sediment source, and the degree to which gully systems also store sediment, and the timescales of this storage, have received less attention. Gully sediment storage is important because many sedimentary archives, such as floodplains and lakes, have recorded increases in sedimentation rates particularly in Medieval times, which are interpreted as the result of increased slope erosion and gully activity. At present there is insufficient evidence directly linking such other sedimentary archives and gully systems. There is also a lack of long term records which may indicate how the major external controls, climatic or anthropogenic, might determine gully responses. To address this, we analysed sediment sources and sinks within a small (43. ha) gully catchment in the Spessart Mountains, Germany. We found five main phases of erosion and deposition since ~. 13. ka, which revealed catchment vegetation significantly controlled geomorphic responses. A loss of vegetation due to climate deterioration (e.g. Younger Dryas) or deforestation (e.g. Medieval period) caused widespread slope instability and the aggradation of the gully thalweg. In contrast, well forested conditions before the Medieval period, and again in recent years, re-stabilised the slopes, leading to gully incision with knickpoint retreat. This result differs from previous interpretations of gully activity in Central Europe that gully erosion mostly occurred in Medieval times. Our results also demonstrate that only the initial phase of knickpoint retreat is significant for supplying sediment to the gully fan and trunk stream. Then knickpoint retreat leads to a relative increase in the thalweg storage capacity downstream, which limits further sediment export. This has important implications for the interpretation of floodplain ages, since the initial supply of gully sediment to trunk streams may not coincide with human impact. Instead, there will be a lagged response between catchment reforestation and the onset of gully incision, which in this study is up to ~. 150. years. Therefore, the assumption of a direct causal link between increases in floodplain sedimentation and slope erosion may not always be valid.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)215-226
Number of pages12
JournalGeomorphology
Volume201
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Deforestation
  • Gully erosion
  • Holocene
  • Human impact
  • Sediment delivery
  • Sediment storage

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