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A demonstration of the importance of bedload transport for fluvial bedrock erosion and knickpoint propagation
Authors:Kristen L. Cook  Jens M. Turowski  Niels Hovius
Affiliation:1. Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University, , Taipei, Taiwan;2. Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, , Birmensdorf, Switzerland;3. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, , Cambridge, UK
Abstract:We provide field evidence for the role of bedload in driving fluvial incision and knickpoint propagation. Using aerial photographs, field surveys, and hydrological data, we constrain the incision history of a bedrock gorge 1200 m long and up to 20 m deep cut by Da'an River in western Taiwan. This reach of the river experienced 10 m of uplift during the 1999 Chi‐Chi earthquake. For five years following the earthquake, bedload was prevented from entering the uplift zone, the knickpoint was static and little incision took place. Bedload transport across the uplift zone resumed in 2004, initiating extremely rapid incision, with 620 m of knickpoint propagation and up to 20 m of downcutting by 2008. This change highlights the relative inefficiency of suspended sediment and the dominant role of bedload as a tool for fluvial erosion and knickpoint propagation. Once bedload tools became available, knickpoint propagation was influenced by geological structure, lithology, and drainage organization. In particular, a change in dip of the sandstone beds at the site caused a decrease of knickpoint propagation velocity. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:fluvial erosion  knickpoint propagation  bedload transport  gorge formation
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