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Bedload-to-suspended load ratio and rapid bedrock incision from Himalayan landslide-dam lake record
Quaternary Research (2007)
  • Breth Pratt-Sitaula, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Michelle Garde, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Douglas W. Burbank, University of California, Santa Barbara
  • Michael Oskin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Arjun Heimsath
  • Emmanuel J. Gabet
Abstract
About 5400 cal yr BP, a large landslide formed a > 400-m-tall dam in the upper Marsyandi River, central Nepal. The resulting lacustrine and deltaic deposits stretched > 7 km upstream, reaching a thickness of 120 m. 14C dating of 7 wood fragments reveals that the aggradation and subsequent incision occurred remarkably quickly (∼ 500 yr). Reconstructed volumes of lacustrine (∼ 0.16 km3) and deltaic (∼ 0.09 km3) deposits indicate a bedload-to-suspended load ratio of 1:2, considerably higher than the ≤ 1:10 that is commonly assumed. At the downstream end of the landslide dam, the river incised a new channel through ≥ 70 m of Greater Himalayan gneiss, requiring a minimum bedrock incision rate of 13 mm/yr over last 5400 yr. The majority of incision presumably occurred over a fraction of this time, suggesting much higher rates. The high bedload ratio from such an energetic mountain river is a particularly significant addition to our knowledge of sediment flux in orogenic environments.
Keywords
  • Bedload,
  • Suspended load,
  • Himalaya,
  • Nepal,
  • Bedrock incision,
  • Landslide dam
Publication Date
2007
Publisher Statement
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Citation Information
Breth Pratt-Sitaula, Michelle Garde, Douglas W. Burbank, Michael Oskin, et al.. "Bedload-to-suspended load ratio and rapid bedrock incision from Himalayan landslide-dam lake record" Quaternary Research Vol. 68 Iss. 1 (2007)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/emmanuel_gabet/23/