Morphodynamic evolution following sediment release from the world’s largest dam removal

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作者
Andrew C. Ritchie
Jonathan A. Warrick
Amy E. East
Christopher S. Magirl
Andrew W. Stevens
Jennifer A. Bountry
Timothy J. Randle
Christopher A. Curran
Robert C. Hilldale
Jeffrey J. Duda
Guy R. Gelfenbaum
Ian M. Miller
George R. Pess
Melissa M. Foley
Randall McCoy
Andrea S. Ogston
机构
[1] United States Geological Survey,Pacific Coastal and Marine Science Center
[2] United States Geological Survey,Arizona Water Science Center
[3] United States Bureau of Reclamation,Sedimentation and River Hydraulics Group, Technical Service Center
[4] United States Geological Survey,Washington Water Science Center
[5] United States Geological Survey,Western Fisheries Research Center
[6] Olympic Peninsula Field Office,Washington Sea Grant
[7] Northwest Fisheries Science Center,Natural Resources Department
[8] National Marine Fisheries Service,School of Oceanography
[9] National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,undefined
[10] Department of Commerce,undefined
[11] Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe,undefined
[12] University of Washington,undefined
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摘要
Sediment pulses can cause widespread, complex changes to rivers and coastal regions. Quantifying landscape response to sediment-supply changes is a long-standing problem in geomorphology, but the unanticipated nature of most sediment pulses rarely allows for detailed measurement of associated landscape processes and evolution. The intentional removal of two large dams on the Elwha River (Washington, USA) exposed ~30 Mt of impounded sediment to fluvial erosion, presenting a unique opportunity to quantify source-to-sink river and coastal responses to a massive sediment-source perturbation. Here we evaluate geomorphic evolution during and after the sediment pulse, presenting a 5-year sediment budget and morphodynamic analysis of the Elwha River and its delta. Approximately 65% of the sediment was eroded, of which only ~10% was deposited in the fluvial system. This restored fluvial supply of sand, gravel, and wood substantially changed the channel morphology. The remaining ~90% of the released sediment was transported to the coast, causing ~60 ha of delta growth. Although metrics of geomorphic change did not follow simple time-coherent paths, many signals peaked 1–2 years after the start of dam removal, indicating combined impulse and step-change disturbance responses.
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