Abstract
Ephemeral alluvial streams pose globally significant flood hazards to human habitation in drylands, but sparse data for these regions limit understanding of the character and impacts of extreme flooding. In this study, we document decadal changes in dryland ephemeral channel patterns at two sites in the lower Colorado River Basin (southwestern United States) that were ravaged by extraordinary flash floods in the 1970s: Bronco Creek, Arizona (1971), and Eldorado Canyon, Nevada (1974). We refer to these two floods as ‘fluviomorphic erasure events’, because they produced blank slates for the channels that were gradually moulded by more frequent but much smaller flood events. We studied georectified aerial photos that span ~60 years at each site to show that both study sites recovered to their pre-flood condition after ~25 years. We employ channel network metrics: stream-link area (SLA), geometric braiding index and junction-node density. Each metric decreased during the short-duration extreme flood erasure events. Subsequently, a fluviomorphic trajectory at a decadal tempo returned the channels to pre-flood values. The SLA decreased at rates of 3.6%–4.1% per year in the decade following the floods. The extreme flood events decreased the pre-flood geometric braiding index at the two sites by 56%–68%, and it took 15–24 years for this index to recover to pre-flood values. In contrast, it took 30–35 years for the channels to recover to a uniform pre-flood channel form, as indicated by the spatial distribution of bars and junction nodes. Our results document baseline examples of ephemeral stream channel evolution trajectories, as future climatic change will likely accelerate increases in the magnitudes and frequencies of extreme floods and geomorphic erasure events.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 2628-2650 |
| Number of pages | 23 |
| Journal | Earth Surface Processes and Landforms |
| Volume | 49 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| Early online date | 3 May 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - Jul 2024 |
| MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Funding
The funding has been gained from the Academy of Finland (DefrostingRivers project, Grant Number 338480; ExRIVER project, Grant Number 267345; and RivCHANGE project, Grant Number 136234) and the University of Turku (Turun Yliopisto), Department of Geography and Geology (Geography section). We also thank Dr. Philip A. Pearthree from the Arizona Geological Survey for assisting in the field in March 2013 and for helping in gathering the aerial photographs from Bronco Creek. We thank Jin Li from the University of Arizona for helping to estimate and calculate the recurrence intervals of the extraordinary floods in Bronco Creek and Eldorado Canyon.
Keywords
- bifurcation density
- confluence density
- drylands
- ephemeral streams
- flash flooding
- fluviomorphic trajectory
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Dive into the research topics of 'Fluviomorphic trajectories for dryland ephemeral stream channels following extreme flash floods'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
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DefrostingRivers / AT Lotsari: Defrosting sedimentary systems: the impacts on the evolution and material transport of seasonally frozen high-latitude rivers
Lotsari, E. (Principal investigator)
01/09/2021 → 31/08/2026
Project: RCF Academy Research Fellow (new)
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