Morphology and recent history of the Rhone River Delta in Lake Geneva (Switzerland) |
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Authors: | Vincent Sastre Jean-Luc Loizeau Jens Greinert Lieven Naudts Philippe Arpagaus Flavio Anselmetti Walter Wildi |
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Institution: | 1. Institut F.-A. Forel, Université de Genève, 10, route de Suisse, CP 146, 1290, Versoix, Switzerland 2. Department of Geology and Soil Science, Renard Centre of Marine Geology, Ghent University, Krijgslaan 281 s.8, 9000, Ghent, Belgium 3. Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), P.O. Box 59, 1790 AB, Den Burg (Texel), The Netherlands 4. Department of Surface Waters, Sedimentology Group, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology (Eawag), überlandstrasse 133, 8600, Dübendorf, Switzerland
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Abstract: | The current topographic maps of the Rhone Delta—and of Lake Geneva in general—are mainly based on hydrographic data that were
acquired during the time of F.-A. Forel at the end of the nineteenth century. In this paper we present results of a new bathymetric
survey, based on single- and multi-beam echosounder data. The new data, presented as a digital terrain model, show a well-structured
lake bottom morphology, reflecting depositional and erosional processes that shape the lake floor. As a major geomorphologic
element, the sub-aquatic Rhone Delta extends from the coastal platform to the depositional fans of the central plain of the
lake at 310 m depth. 9 canyons cut the platform edge of the delta. These are sinuous (“meandering”) channels formed by erosional
and depositional processes, as indicated by the steep erosional canyon walls and the depositional levees on the canyon shoulders.
Ripples or dune-like morphologies wrinkle the canyon bottoms and some slope areas. Subaquatic mass movements are apparently
missing on the delta and are of minor importance on the lateral lake slopes. Morphologies of the underlying bedrock and small
local river deltas are located along the lateral slopes of Lake Geneva. Based on historical maps, the recent history of the
Rhone River connection to the sub-aquatic delta and the canyons is reconstructed. The transition from three to two river branches
dates to 1830–1840, when the river branch to the Le Bouveret lake bay was cut. The transition from two to one river branch
corresponds to the achievement of the correction and dam construction work on the modern Rhone River channel between 1870
and 1880. |
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