Controls on sediment export from the Waipaoa River basin, New Zealand

被引:24
|
作者
Phillips, Jonathan D. [1 ]
Gomez, Basil
机构
[1] Univ Kentucky, Dept Geog, Tobacco Rd Res Team, Lexington, KY 40506 USA
[2] Indiana State Univ, Geomorphol Lab, Terre Haute, IN 47809 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1111/j.1365-2117.2007.00325.x
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
A stability model of drainage basin mass balance is used to interpret historic and prehistoric patterns of sediment production, storage and output from the Waipaoa River basin, New Zealand and assess the sensitivity of basin sediment yield to land use change in the historic period. Climate and vegetation cover changed during the late Holocene, but the drainage basin mass balance system was stable before the basin was deforested by European colonists in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. In this meso-scale dispersal system sediment sources and sinks are closely linked, and before that time there was also little variability in the rate of terrigenous mass accumulation on the adjacent continental shelf. However, despite strong first-order geologic controls on erosion and extensive alluvial storage, sediment delivery to the continental shelf is sensitive and highly responsive to historic hillslope destabilization driven by land use change. Alluvial buffering can mask the effects of variations in sediment production within a basin on sediment yield at the outlet, but this is most likely to occur in basins where alluvial storage is large relative to yield and where the residence time of alluvial sediment is long relative to the time scale of environmental change. At present, neither situation applies to the Waipaoa River basin. Thus, the strength of the contemporary depositional signal may not only be due to the intensity of the erosion processes involved, but also to the fact that land use change in the historic period destabilized the drainage basin mass balance system.
引用
收藏
页码:241 / 252
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Hillslope response to climate-modulated river incision in the Waipaoa catchment, East Coast North Island, New Zealand
    Bilderback, Eric L.
    Pettinga, Jarg R.
    Litchfield, Nicola J.
    Quigley, Mark
    Marden, Michael
    Roering, Josh J.
    Palmer, Alan S.
    GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN, 2015, 127 (1-2) : 131 - 148
  • [42] Last glacial aggradation and postglacial sediment production from the non-glacial Waipaoa and Waimata catchments, Hikurangi Margin, North Island, New Zealand
    Marden, Michael
    Mazengarb, Colin
    Palmer, Alan
    Berryman, Kelvin
    Rowan, Donna
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2008, 99 (1-4) : 404 - 419
  • [43] Predictability of Heavy Precipitation in the Waikato River Basin of New Zealand
    Dravitzki, Stacey
    McGregor, James
    MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW, 2011, 139 (07) : 2184 - 2197
  • [44] Dispersal and transformation of organic carbon across an episodic, high sediment discharge continental margin, Waipaoa Sedimentary System, New Zealand
    Brackley, Hannah L.
    Blair, Neal E.
    Trustrum, Noel A.
    Carter, Lionel
    Leithold, Elana L.
    Canuel, Elizabeth A.
    Johnston, James H.
    Tate, Kevin R.
    MARINE GEOLOGY, 2010, 270 (1-4) : 202 - 212
  • [45] Modelling landscape evolution in the Waipaoa catchment, New Zealand - A phenomenalogical approach
    Dymond, John R.
    De Rose, Ron
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2011, 132 (1-2) : 29 - 34
  • [46] A Hydrodynamic and Sediment Transport Model for the Waipaoa Shelf, New Zealand: Sensitivity of Fluxes to Spatially-Varying Erodibility and Model Nesting
    Moriarty, Julia M.
    Harris, Courtney K.
    Hadfield, Mark G.
    JOURNAL OF MARINE SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING, 2014, 2 (02): : 336 - 369
  • [47] Slip slidin' away: A post-glacial environmental history of the Waipaoa River basin
    Gomez, Basil
    Rosser, Brenda J.
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2018, 307 : 65 - 76
  • [48] Characterization and quantification of suspended sediment sources to the Manawatu River, New Zealand
    Vale, S. S.
    Fuller, I. C.
    Procter, J. N.
    Basher, L. R.
    Smith, I. E.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2016, 543 : 171 - 186
  • [49] Suspended sediment properties and visual clarity of the Manawatū River, New Zealand
    Davies-Colley, Rob J.
    Hughes, Andrew O.
    Haddadchi, Arman
    Dymond, John R.
    Vale, Simon S.
    Smith, Hugh G.
    NEW ZEALAND JOURNAL OF MARINE AND FRESHWATER RESEARCH, 2024,
  • [50] A 2400 yr record of natural events and anthropogenic impacts in intercorrelated terrestrial and marine sediment cores: Waipaoa sedimentary system, New Zealand
    Gomez, Basil
    Carter, Lionel
    Trustrum, Noel A.
    GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN, 2007, 119 (11-12) : 1415 - 1432