Base-level Impact: A Geomorphic Approach

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Much of the final shaping of the global landscape is accomplished by incision of river networks. The base-level is a principle determinate controlling the global relief by  processes of erosion and aggradation. In the populated world, entrenchments triggered by base-level changes may become devastating events, damaging agricultural lands, undercutting bridges and destroying roads.

The aim of this book, as a chapter in fluviomorphology, is to present the base-level control when active in the continental interior, unrelated to marine base-level fluctuations along the continental margins nor to sequence stratigraphic tract models in Exxon sequence stratigraphic sense. The focus is on the morphology and the gross trends of the processes controlling channel evolution through transient signals initiated by base-level changes and communicated upstream through the drainage network.

The book brings together principles and conclusions gained by field work, by laboratory studies and by models, based on the widely scattered literature. The chapters include presentation of different types of base-levels, discussing the constraints of their altitude, the degradation and aggradation responses, the temporal and spatial trends along the channel network, the controlling factors, the knickpoint transient retreat process and its rates. Special emphasis is given to the Dead Sea Rift following its extreme base-level conditions which make it a unique field laboratory.

This book is relevant to students in earth sciences as well as to planners, hydrologists and engineers dealing with geomorphology and surface drainage.

 

 


Author(s): Dan Bowman
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 157
City: Cham

Preface
References
‏Acknowledgments
Contents
About the Author
1 Base-Level—Definitions and Location
References
2 Constraints of the Base-Level Altitude
2.1 Tectonic/Isostatic and Volcanic Base-Level Control
2.2 Climatic Base-Level Control
2.3 Man-Made Control
References
3 Discontinuity in Slope—Knickpoints and Knickzones
3.1 Knickpoints
3.2 Knickzones
References
4 Degradation
4.1 Incision
4.2 Deepening and Narrowing
4.3 Lateral Erosion
4.4 Complex Response
References
5 Base-Level Rise
5.1 The Coastal Marine Environment
5.2 Continental Aggradation
References
6 Controlling Factors
6.1 The Contributing Drainage Area
6.2 The Substrate
6.3 The Sediment Flux
6.4 Slope Sourcing
6.5 Slope Gradients
6.6 Magnitude and Rate
6.7 Response Variability and Complexity
References
7 Knickpoint Retreat
7.1 Waterfall Knickpoint Retreat
7.2 Drainage Area Control
7.3 Lag
References
8 Knickpoint Evolution
8.1 Knickpoint Diffusion
8.2 Upstream Propagation
8.3 Form Evolution
References
9 Longitudinal Profiles
9.1 Concavity, Convexity, Divergence and Convergence
9.2 Controls of the Profile
References
10 Rates
10.1 Incision
10.2 Knickpoint Migration
References
11 The Messinian Event
11.1 The Base-Level Drop Event
11.2 Morphological Impacts
References
12 Morphological Products
12.1 Two-Storey Morphology
12.2 River Terraces
12.3 Hillslope Control
12.4 Divide Migration
12.5 Entrapped Channel Morphology Under Rapid and Continuous Base-Level Fall
References
13 The Transient-Equilibrium Test
13.1 Steady State Criterions
13.2 Transient Activity
References
14 Tributary Junctions
References
15 Small-Scale Networks and Man-Made Structures
15.1 Small-Scale Networks
15.2 Man-Made Structures
References
16 The Dead Sea Area as a Field Laboratory—A Regional Approach
16.1 Setting
16.2 Lakes as Fluctuating Base-Levels
16.3 Incision
16.4 Longitudinal Profiles and Connectivity
16.5 Sinuosity
16.6 Cross-Sectional Evolution
16.7 Summary
References