Title
Crevassing and capture by floodplain drains as a cause of partial avulsion and anastomosis (lower Rio Pastaza, Peru)
Date Issued
01 July 2013
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Bernal C.
Christophoul F.
Darrozes J.
Laraque A.
Bourrel L.
Soula J.C.
Baby P.
Institut de Recherche pour le Développement
Abstract
Avulsion is the main process at the origin of anastomosing rivers. This study illustrates 3 examples of avulsions resulting from crevasse splays evolving in anastomosed channels along the Rio Pastaza, a tropical humid river sourced in the Ecuadorian Andean Cordillera and flowing into the Amazonian foreland. The Lower Pastaza flows in an alluvial plain, with no tectonic influence and an average monthly rainfall equally distributed throughout the year. Based on the analysis of satellite image recorded over the period 1977-2008, three cases have been studied. The first one began in 1990 with crevassing of natural levees of the right bank of the Pastaza main channel and the formation of a small channel linking up with a pre-existing tributary to this main channel. A splay formed at the confluence beheaded the tributary which became an anabranch of the main river. Downstream, two other avulsions developed from crevasse splays on a low gradient floodplain. In both cases, capture of one of the distributary channels flowing on the splay by a pre-existing drain of the floodplain and consecutive headward erosion arrives to disconnect the other drains and capture their flow into a single-thread channel. As this channel rejoins the Pastaza main channel downstream, this process gives rise to the larger-scale anastomosing system which characterizes the lower reach of the Rio Pastaza. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.
Start page
63
End page
74
Volume
44
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Geología Meteorología y ciencias atmosféricas Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84877608710
Source
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
ISSN of the container
08959811
Sponsor(s)
This investigation was supported by a doctoral Albαn fellowship of the European Union (n° E05D057404EC ), IRD and Université Paul Sabatier grants. We are grateful to the HYBAM/Ecuador project and its partnership institutions, INAMHI and IRD; and to the ‘Instituto Geofisico’ of the ‘Escuela Politecnica Nacional' of Quito – Ecuador. The Centre for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) provided topographic data. The authors thank Bart Makaske and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive comments.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus