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ASYNCHRONOUS TERRACE DEVELOPMENT IN DEGRADING BRAIDED CHANNELS
Authors:Dru Germanoski  Michael D Harvey
Institution:1. Geology Department , Lafayette College , Easton, Pennsylvania 18042;2. Resource Consultants and Engineers, Inc. , 3665 JFK Parkway, Building 2, Suite 300, PO Box Q Fort Collins, Colorado 80522
Abstract:Terrace remnants are commonly used to reconstruct longitudinal profiles of rivers and floodplains, and to establish temporal correlations of events in fluvial systems. In most cases, it is assumed that the terrace remnants represent time-equivalent surfaces. Our observations of terrace formation in flume experiments and in a degrading braided river, Ash Creek, Arizona, suggest that this assumption is not always valid. Degradation resulted from a reduction in upstream sediment delivery to braided channels. In both the flume and Ash Creek, degradation in the upstream reach produced a number of inset terraces, while the production of sediment in the degrading reach simultaneously caused further aggradation downstream. Thus, stratigraphically lower surfaces in the upstream reaches are temporally equivalent to higher surfaces in downstream reaches. The downstream progression of the wave of incision produced more terraces upstream than downstream, and terrace surfaces could not be correlated on the basis of relative position or elevation above the channel bed. Furthermore, a physically continuous terrace tread was produced by longitudinal accretion of temporally non-equivalent depositional segments, as the locus of deposition progressed downstream. Therefore, in some instances, physically continuous terrace treads may not be time-equivalent surfaces that represent former channel bed or floodplain profiles. Key words: terrace development, degradation, braided channels, channel pattern change.]
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