Contrasting morphodynamics in alluvial fans and fan deltas: effect of the downstream boundary
Publication date
2012
Authors
Dijk, M. van
Kleinhans, M.G.
Postma, G.
Kraal, E.
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Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2012
Abstract
Alluvial fans and fan deltas can, in principle, have exactly the same upstream
conditions, but fan deltas by definition have ponding water at their downstream
boundary. This ponding creates effects on the autogenic behaviour of fan deltas,
such as backwater adaptation, mouth bars and backward sedimentation,
whereas alluvial fans may lack these effects. Hence the present authors
hypothesize that morphodynamics on alluvial fans are determined primarily by
upstream boundary conditions, whereas morphodynamics on fan deltas are
determined by both the upstream and the downstream boundary condition and
changes therein. To isolate the effects of the upstream and downstream
boundaries, five new alluvial fan experiments are compared with the details of
three fan deltas published earlier that were formed under very similar and
simple conditions. Similar to the fan deltas, the alluvial fans build up by sheet
flow, whilst quasi-regular periods of incision cause temporary channelized
flow. Incision is followed by channel backfilling, after which the fan returns to
sheet flow. The channelization and backfilling in alluvial fans is markedly less
pronounced and more prone to autogenic disturbance than in fan deltas. The
difference is caused by morphodynamics at the downstream boundary. In a fan
delta, the flow expansion of the channel causes deposition of all the sediment,
which forms a mouth bar and causes strong backfilling. In an alluvial fan, on the
other hand, the slope break at the fan perimeter causes some deposition, but
transport is not reduced to zero. Consequently, the backfilling in alluvial fans is
less pronounced than in fan deltas. Other published experiments support this
trend: removal of the mouth bar by a river leads to permanent channelization,
whilst pronounced mouth-bar formation in highly channelized deltas promotes
backward sedimentation. The experimental results for this study predict that,
when alluvial fans prograde into lakes or deep rivers, they transition to fan
deltas with increasingly deeper channels and thicker backfill deposits.
Keywords
Alluvial fans, autogenic behaviour, downstream boundary condition, experiments, fan deltas