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Long-term flood controls on semi-arid river form: Evidence from the Sabie and Olifants rivers, eastern South Africa

Heritage, G.; Tooth, S.; Entwistle, N.; Milan, D.

Authors

G. Heritage

S. Tooth

N. Entwistle



Abstract

Rivers in the Kruger National Park, eastern South Africa, are characterised by bedrock-influenced ‘macrochannels’ containing variable alluvial thicknesses and riparian vegetation assemblages. Evidence from the Sabie and Olifants rivers suggests that flows up to moderate floods (<3500 m3 s-1) tend to result in net alluviation, with sediments gradually covering the underlying bedrock. More extreme floods strip alluvium and erode bedrock, effectively exerting the primary control over long-term river morphologic development. On the Olifants River, post-flood aerial LIDAR imagery reveals that the 2012 extreme flood (~14000 m3 s-1) resulted in extensive stripping of stored alluvial sediment, exposing and eroding the underlying weathered bedrock. On the Sabie River, preliminary optically stimulated luminescence ages for remnant alluvium are all less than 1000 years, highlighting typical timescales of sediment storage. Together, these results suggest that while periods of general alluviation occur on these systems, long-term river development results from extreme flood-generated bedrock erosion.

Citation

Heritage, G., Tooth, S., Entwistle, N., & Milan, D. Long-term flood controls on semi-arid river form: Evidence from the Sabie and Olifants rivers, eastern South Africa

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (published)
Acceptance Date Dec 11, 2014
Online Publication Date Mar 3, 2015
Publication Date Jan 1, 2014
Deposit Date Apr 28, 2016
Publicly Available Date Apr 28, 2016
Journal Proceedings of the international association of hydrological sciences
Print ISSN 0144-7815
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
Volume 367
Pages 141-146
ISBN 9781907161452
DOI https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-367-141-2015
Keywords Semi-arid river, Channel development, Flood impact, Sabie River, Olifants River
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/437358
Publisher URL http://www.proc-iahs.net/367/141/2015/
Additional Information This is a copy of an open access article published in Proceedings of the international association of hydrological sciences, 2014, v.367.
Contract Date Apr 28, 2016

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