학술논문

Holocene alluvial sediment storage in a small river catchment in the loess area of central Belgium
Document Type
Report
Source
Geomorphology. July 15, 2006, Vol. 77 Issue 1-2, p187, 15 p.
Subject
Sedimentation
Loess
Geography
Alluvial plains
Peat
Tufa
Soils
Soil erosion
Wetland flora
Rivers
Language
English
ISSN
0169-555X
Abstract
To link to full-text access for this article, visit this link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2006.01.028 Byline: Tom Rommens (a), Gert Verstraeten (a)(b), Pieter Bogman (a), Iris Peeters (a), Jean Poesen (a), Gerard Govers (a), Anton Van Rompaey (a)(b), Andreas Lang (c) Keywords: Holocene; Alluvial sediment storage; Sediment budget; Soil erosion; Human impact; Belgium Abstract: Soil erosion and sediment deposition widely affect landscape development, particularly in erosion-prone areas with loess-derived soils. Nevertheless, until now, few attempts were made to quantify soil losses and sediment storage over long (centennial or millennial) timescales. In this study, the Holocene alluvial sediment storage in a small river catchment (52km.sup.2) of the Belgian loess belt is estimated, and a preliminary sediment budget for the catchment is presented. In the valley of the Nethen River (c. 13km long), a detailed survey of the alluvial sediment archive was conducted. Hand augerings and percussion drillings were made along cross-valley transects at 12 locations in the catchment. AMS.sup.14C dating of peat samples provided a temporal framework for the interpretation of the cores. Results show that the thickness of Holocene sediment deposits in the Nethen valley is 4 to 6m, which corresponds to a total clastic sediment mass of [approximately equal to]14x10.sup.6 t stored in the valley bottom. Three alluvial units could be distinguished and associated with deposition phases from 9600 to 2900 B.C., 2900 B.C. to A.D. 1000 and A.D. 1000 to present. In contrast to the older sediments (units 1 and 2), deposits from the last 1000 year (unit 3) contain little organic matter. They are seldom intercalated with peat layers, and devoid of tufa. Unit 3 reaches a thickness of c. 2m, thereby representing 50% of the Holocene sediment mass stored in the alluvial plain. The mean sedimentation rate in the alluvial plain for this last phase is [approximately equal to]26t ha.sup.-1 a.sup.-1, which is about tenfold larger than the sedimentation rates calculated for the older Holocene sediment units. Sediment supply towards the alluvial plain has therefore increased tremendously since Medieval times. These results are in contrast to dating results obtained for colluvial sediments in a nearby dry valley within the catchment of the Nethen, where soil erosion and sediment deposition started in the early Iron Age and was already substantial during the Roman Age. This means that there is a time lag of about one millennium between the onset of high sedimentation rates in the upstream area and high deposition rates in the alluvial plain. This is probably caused by a change in coupling (sediment connectivity) between the plateau, slopes, and rivers. As soil erosion proceeds, first the dry zero-order valleys in the catchment act as sediment traps, and only after these are filled sediment reaches the floodplains. The preliminary sediment budget for the Nethen catchment illustrates that 50% of the sediment that was eroded during the Holocene was stored in colluvial deposits, which are mainly located on footslopes and in dry valley bottoms. Another 29% of the sediment mass is stored in the alluvial plain. Author Affiliation: (a) Physical and Regional Geography Research Group, K.U. Leuven, Celestijnenlaan 200 E, B-3001 Heverlee, Belgium (b) Fund for Scientific Research-Flanders, Belgium (c) Department of Geography, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 7ZT, UK Article History: Received 8 July 2005; Revised 9 January 2006; Accepted 10 January 2006