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Contrasting bedrock incision rates from snowmelt and flash floods in the Henry Mountains, Utah

Joel P. L. Johnson, Kelin X. Whipple and Leonard S. Sklar
Contrasting bedrock incision rates from snowmelt and flash floods in the Henry Mountains, Utah
Geological Society of America Bulletin (September 2010) 122 (9-10): 1600-1615

Abstract

Hydrograph variability and channel morphology influence rates of fluvial bedrock incision, but little data exist on these controls in natural channels. Through field monitoring we demonstrate that (1) short-term bedrock channel incision can be rapid, (2) sustained floods with smaller peak discharges can be more erosive than flash floods with higher peak discharges, due to changes in bed alluviation, and (3) bedrock channel morphology varies with local bed slope and controls the spatial distribution of erosion. We present a three-year record of flow depths and bedrock erosion for a human-perturbed channel reach that drains the Henry Mountains of Utah, USA. Starting from a small and steep ( approximately 30% slope), engineered knickpoint in Navajo sandstone, erosion has cut a narrow, deep, and tortuous inner channel in approximately 35-40 years. Along the inner channel, we measured up to 1/2 m of vertical incision into Navajo sandstone over approximately 23 days, caused by the 2005 season of exceptional snowmelt flow. In contrast, flash floods caused little bedrock incision even when peak discharges were much higher than the peak snowmelt flow. Flash floods were net depositors of coarse sediment while snowmelt flow cleared alluvial cover. We document the formation of a pothole and interpret that it was abraded by bedload rather than fine suspended sediment. Finally, several slot canyons (Peek-a-boo, Spooky, and Coyote Gulch narrows) in the nearby Escalante River drainage basin have erosional morphologies similar to the monitored channel reach. Feedbacks between flow, sediment transport, and transient erosion provide a plausible explanation for the evolution of channel slope, width, and bed roughness of these natural bedrock channels.


ISSN: 0016-7606
EISSN: 1943-2674
Coden: BUGMAF
Serial Title: Geological Society of America Bulletin
Serial Volume: 122
Serial Issue: 9-10
Title: Contrasting bedrock incision rates from snowmelt and flash floods in the Henry Mountains, Utah
Affiliation: University of Texas at Austin, Department of Geological Sciences, Austin, TX, United States
Pages: 1600-1615
Published: 201009
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 81
Accession Number: 2010-068243
Categories: HydrogeologyGeomorphology
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus.
N37°40'00" - N38°12'00", W111°01'60" - W110°30'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Arizona State University, USA, United StatesSan Francisco State University, USA, United States
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 201037
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