首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     

Mass flows and river response in rapid uplifting regions-A case of lower Yarlung Tsangpo basin,southeast Tibet,China
引用本文:Guo-An Yu,Jianyin Lu,Liqun Lyu,Lujie Han,Zhaoyin Wang. Mass flows and river response in rapid uplifting regions-A case of lower Yarlung Tsangpo basin,southeast Tibet,China[J]. 国际泥沙研究, 2020, 35(6): 609-620. DOI: 10.1016/j.ijsrc.2020.05.006
作者姓名:Guo-An Yu  Jianyin Lu  Liqun Lyu  Lujie Han  Zhaoyin Wang
作者单位:Key Laboratory of Water Cycle and Related Land Surface Processes;College of Resources and Environment;School of Soil and Water Conservation;Tsinghua University
基金项目:This research was funded by and the National Key R&D Program of China(2018YFC1505201);the National Natural Science Foundation of China(41971010).
摘    要:The fluvial geomorphology in tectonically active(particularly rapid uplift)regions often undergoes continuous change.The rapid uplift is coincident with high erosion rates;consequently,incised valleys are formed.Mass flows(for example,avalanches,landslides,and debris flows)in incised valleys can markedly influence fluvial processes and even reshape valley geomorphology.However,these processes and long-term evolution corresponding to mass flows require further clarification.Field campaigns were carried out in the region near the Yigong Tsangpo and Palong Tsangpo Rivers(hereafter the Yigong and Palong Rivers),the two largest tributaries of the lower Yarlung Tsangpo River Tibet,China,to examine the feedback between fluvial processes and mass flows.Remote sensing images from recent decades were used to compare the channel morphology before and after typical mass flows(particularly catastrophic ones).The morphology of the lower Yigong River has evidently been impacted by landslides,while that of the Palong River has mainly been shaped by glacial processes and debris flows.At present,the morphology of the latter consists of alternating sections of gorges and wide valleys,with a staircase-like longitudinal profile.The gorge sections exhibit single and deeply incised channels with a high-gradient channel bed and terraces.In contrast,the wide valley sections consist of lakes,braided or anabranching channels,gentle bed gradients,and thick alluvial deposits.Debris flows occur more frequently in gullies in the reaches of the gorge sections and rarely in gullies along the wide valley sections.The occurrence of mass flow events has resulted in an imbalance of the previous(quasi-)equilibrium in the river morphology;however,this has triggered negative feedback that is driving the transient river morphology to a new state of(quasi-)equilibrium.

关 键 词:Mass  flow  Debris  flow  Glacial  erosion  Fluvial  processes  Negative  feedback
收稿时间:2019-11-19

Mass flows and river response in rapid uplifting regions – A case of lower Yarlung Tsangpo basin,southeast Tibet,China
Affiliation:1. Key Laboratory of Continental Collision and Plateau Uplift, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;2. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;3. Center for Excellence in Tibetan Plateau Earth Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
Abstract:The fluvial geomorphology in tectonically active (particularly rapid uplift) regions often undergoes continuous change. The rapid uplift is coincident with high erosion rates; consequently, incised valleys are formed. Mass flows (for example, avalanches, landslides, and debris flows) in incised valleys can markedly influence fluvial processes and even reshape valley geomorphology. However, these processes and long-term evolution corresponding to mass flows require further clarification. Field campaigns were carried out in the region near the Yigong Tsangpo and Palong Tsangpo Rivers (hereafter the Yigong and Palong Rivers), the two largest tributaries of the lower Yarlung Tsangpo River, to examine the feedback between fluvial processes and mass flows. Remote sensing images from recent decades were used to compare the channel morphology before and after typical mass flows (particularly catastrophic ones). The morphology of the lower Yigong River has evidently been impacted by landslides, while that of the Palong River has mainly been shaped by glacial processes and debris flows. At present, the morphology of the latter consists of alternating sections of gorges and wide valleys, with a staircase-like longitudinal profile. The gorge sections exhibit single and deeply incised channels with a high-gradient channel bed and terraces. In contrast, the wide valley sections consist of lakes, braided or anabranching channels, gentle bed gradients, and thick alluvial deposits. Debris flows occur more frequently in gullies in the reaches of the gorge sections and rarely in gullies along the wide valley sections. The occurrence of mass flow events has resulted in an imbalance of the previous (quasi-)equilibrium in the river morphology; however, this has triggered negative feedback that is driving the transient river morphology to a new state of (quasi-)equilibrium.
Keywords:Mass flow  Debris flow  Glacial erosion  Fluvial processes  Negative feedback
本文献已被 维普 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号