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Integrating suspended sediment flux in large alluvial river channels: Application of a synoptic Rouse-based model to the Irrawaddy and Salween rivers
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- A large portion of freshwater and sediment is exported to the ocean by a small number of major rivers. Many of these megarivers are subject to substantial anthropogenic pressures, which are having a major impact on water and sediment delivery to deltaic ecosystems. Due to hydrodynamic sorting, sediment grain size and composition vary strongly with depth and across the channel in large rivers, complicating flux quantification. To account for this, we modified a semi‐empirical Rouse model, synoptically predicting sediment concentration, grain‐size distribution, and organic carbon (%OC) concentration with depth and across the river channel. Using suspended sediment depth samples and flow velocity data, we applied this model to calculate sediment fluxes of the Irrawaddy (Ayeyarwady) and the Salween (Thanlwin), the last two free‐flowing megarivers in Southeast Asia. Deriving sediment‐discharge rating curves, we calculated an annual sediment flux of urn:x-wiley:jgrf:media:jgrf21236:jgrf21236-math-0001 Mt/year for the Irrawaddy and urn:x-wiley:jgrf:media:jgrf21236:jgrf21236-math-0002 Mt/year for the Salween, together exporting 46% as much sediment as the Ganges‐Brahmaputra system. The mean flux‐weighted sediment exported by the Irrawaddy is significantly coarser (D84 = 193 ± 13 μm) and OC‐poorer (0.29 ± 0.08 wt%) compared to the Salween (112 ± 27 μm and 0.59 ± 0.16 wt%, respectively). Both rivers export similar amounts of particulate organic carbon, with a total of urn:x-wiley:jgrf:media:jgrf21236:jgrf21236-math-0003 Mt C/year, 53% as much as the Ganges‐Brahmaputra. These results underline the global significance of the Irrawaddy and Salween rivers and warrant continued monitoring of their sediment flux, given the increasing anthropogenic pressures on these river basins.
- Subjects :
- bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics
bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Sedimentology
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
sub-01
Sorting (sediment)
bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Geomorphology
bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences
01 natural sciences
Flux (metallurgy)
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Geomorphology
bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Hydrology
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Sedimentology
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Total organic carbon
Hydrology
geography
Particulate organic carbon
3707 Hydrology
geography.geographical_feature_category
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Geology
bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Geology
Sediment
37 Earth Sciences
Alluvial river
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Geochemistry
3709 Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Geophysics
Environmental science
bepress|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Geochemistry
EarthArXiv|Physical Sciences and Mathematics|Earth Sciences|Hydrology
Sediment transport
Channel (geography)
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 21699003
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....ed91fd288be3d3f4616222b48822fd1e