Sediment source changes over the last 250 years in a dry-tropical catchment, central Queensland, Australia

被引:123
|
作者
Hughes, Andrew O. [1 ]
Olley, Jon M. [2 ,3 ]
Croke, Jacky C. [1 ]
McKergow, Lucy A. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ New S, Sch Phys Environm & Math Sci, Canberra, ACT 2600, Australia
[2] Griffith Univ, Australian Rivers Inst, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia
[3] CSIR0 Land & Water, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia
[4] Natl Inst Water & Atmospher Res, Hamilton, New Zealand
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
Gully erosion; Human impact; Source tracing; Overbank deposits; Sediment fingerprinting; Great Barrier Reef; GREAT-BARRIER-REEF; FLUVIAL SUSPENDED SEDIMENT; BURDEKIN RIVER CATCHMENT; FALLOUT CS-137; SOIL MOVEMENT; CORAL RECORD; EROSION; RATES; LUMINESCENCE; RUNOFF;
D O I
10.1016/j.geomorph.2008.09.003
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Rivers draining to the Great Barrier Reef are receiving increased attention with the realisation that European land use changes over the last similar to 150 years may have increased river sediment yields, and that these may have adversely affected the reef environment. Mitigation of the effects associated with such changes is only possible if information on the spatial provenance and dominant types of erosion is known. To date, very few field-based studies have attempted to provide this information. This study uses fallout radionuclide (Cs-137 and Pb-210(ex)) and geochemical tracing of river bed and floodplain sediments to examine sources over the last similar to 250 years for Theresa Creek, a subcatchment of the Fitzroy River basin, central Queensland, Australia. A Monte Carlo style mixing model is used to predict the relative contribution of both the spatial (geological) sources and erosion types. The results indicate that sheetwash and rill erosion from cultivated basaltic land and channel erosion from non-basaltic parts of the catchment are currently contributing most sediment to the river system. Evidence indicates that the dominant form of channel erosion is gully headcut and sidewall erosion. Sheetwash and rill erosion from uncultivated land (i.e., grazed pasture/woodland) is a comparatively minor contributor of sediment to the river network. Analysis of the spatial provenance of floodplain core sediments, in conjunction with optical dating and Cs-137 depth profile data, suggests that a phase of channel erosion was initiated in the late nineteenth century. With the development of land underlain by basalt in the mid-twentieth century the dominant source of erosion shifted to cultivated land, although improvements in land management practices have probably resulted in a decrease in sediment yield from cultivated areas in the later half of the twentieth century. On a basin-wide scale, because of the limited spatial extent of cultivation, channel sources are likely to be the largest contributor of sediment to the Fitzroy River. Accordingly, catchment management measures focused on reducing sediment delivery to the Great Barrier Reef should focus primarily on decreasing erosion from channel sources. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:262 / 275
页数:14
相关论文
共 8 条
  • [1] Fine-suspended sediment and water budgets for a large, seasonally dry tropical catchment: Burdekin River catchment, Queensland, Australia
    Bainbridge, Zoe T.
    Lewis, Stephen E.
    Smithers, Scott G.
    Kuhnert, Petra M.
    Henderson, Brent L.
    Brodie, Jon E.
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2014, 50 (11) : 9067 - 9087
  • [2] Changes in the rates of floodplain and in-channel bench accretion in response to catchment disturbance, central Queensland, Australia
    Hughes, Andrew O.
    Croke, Jacky C.
    Pietsch, Timothy J.
    Olley, Jon M.
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2010, 114 (03) : 338 - 347
  • [3] 10Be constrains the sediment sources and sediment yields to the Great Barrier Reef from the tropical Barron River catchment, Queensland, Australia
    Nichols, Kyle K.
    Bierman, Paul R.
    Rood, Dylan H.
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2014, 224 : 102 - 110
  • [4] Influence of climate fluctuations and changes in catchment land use on Late Holocene and modern beach-ridge sedimentation on a tropical macrotidal coast: Keppel Bay, Queensland, Australia
    Brooke, Brendan
    Ryan, David
    Pietsch, Tim
    Olley, Jon
    Douglas, Grant
    Packett, Robert
    Radke, Lynda
    Flood, Peter
    MARINE GEOLOGY, 2008, 251 (3-4) : 195 - 208
  • [5] Climatic and anthropogenic influences on vegetation changes during the last 5000 years in a seasonal dry tropical forest at the northern limits of the Neotropics
    Lozano-Garcia, Socorro
    Figueroa-Rangel, Blanca
    Sosa-Najera, Susana
    Caballero, Margarita
    Noren, Anders J.
    Metcalfe, Sarah E.
    Tellez-Valdes, Oswaldo
    Ortega-Guerrero, Beatriz
    HOLOCENE, 2021, 31 (05) : 802 - 813
  • [6] Temporal changes in the metal and phosphorus content of suspended sediment transported by Yorkshire rivers, UK over the last 100 years, as recorded by overbank floodplain deposits
    Owens, PN
    Walling, DE
    HYDROBIOLOGIA, 2003, 494 (1-3) : 185 - 191
  • [7] Palaeoenvironmental changes in eastern Crimea over the last 7600 years inferred from a multi-proxy study of a sediment archive from Lake Chokrak
    Rohozin, Yevhenii
    Ljung, Karl
    HOLOCENE, 2024, 34 (02) : 175 - 188
  • [8] Temporal changes in the metal and phosphorus content of suspended sediment transported by Yorkshire rivers, U.K. over the last 100 years, as recorded by overbank floodplain deposits
    Philip N. Owens
    Desmond E. Walling
    Hydrobiologia, 2003, 494 : 185 - 191