Book contents
- Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars
- Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Regional Studies
- 3 Megafans of Africa
- 4 Megafans of the Northern Kalahari Basin (Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia)
- 5 The Chaco Megafans, South America
- 6 Megafans of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil
- 7 Geomorphic and Chronological Assessment of Aggradation Patterns on the Río Grande (Guapay) Megafan, Eastern Bolivia
- 8 Megafans of Southern and Central Europe
- 9 The Loire Megafan, Central France
- 10 Megafans of the Gangetic Plains, India
- 11 The Kosi Megafan, India
- 12 The Holocene Mitchell Megafan, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia
- 13 Megafans of the Northern Victorian Riverine Plains, SE Australia
- Part III Applications in Other Sciences
- Part IV Megafans in World Landscapes
- Index
- References
7 - Geomorphic and Chronological Assessment of Aggradation Patterns on the Río Grande (Guapay) Megafan, Eastern Bolivia
from Part II - Regional Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 April 2023
- Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars
- Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Part I Introduction
- Part II Regional Studies
- 3 Megafans of Africa
- 4 Megafans of the Northern Kalahari Basin (Angola, Botswana, Namibia, Zambia)
- 5 The Chaco Megafans, South America
- 6 Megafans of the Pantanal Basin, Brazil
- 7 Geomorphic and Chronological Assessment of Aggradation Patterns on the Río Grande (Guapay) Megafan, Eastern Bolivia
- 8 Megafans of Southern and Central Europe
- 9 The Loire Megafan, Central France
- 10 Megafans of the Gangetic Plains, India
- 11 The Kosi Megafan, India
- 12 The Holocene Mitchell Megafan, Gulf of Carpentaria, Australia
- 13 Megafans of the Northern Victorian Riverine Plains, SE Australia
- Part III Applications in Other Sciences
- Part IV Megafans in World Landscapes
- Index
- References
Summary
A fan-wide assessment of modern depositional processes on the Río Grande (Guapay) megafan, coupled with the analysis of its Holocene evolution, reveals that most of the 36,000 km2 megafan surface has been subject to sedimentation processes and/or reworking in the last 6–7 ka. Today, depositional dynamics as inferred from multi-date satellite imagery are mostly restricted to a ~ 2,000 km2 depozone on the distal megafan, and are characterised by avulsive fluvial environments. Combining remote sensing with field observations and geochronology at key locations has allowed to capture links between the dynamics of depositional processes and larger-scale landforms, documenting significant changes in the location of the depozone since ~ 4 ka. On shorter time scales, the human impact on these dynamic sedimentary processes is expressed by artificial levees and re-channelisation following crevasse splays. This is likely to have prevented a number of channel avulsions over the last decades and implies that the use of modern avulsion frequencies and depositional rates alone as analogues for understanding Holocene megafan evolution is of limited use. Instead, our observations emphasise the increasing vulnerability to future avulsion events within an intrinsically unstable fluvial environment that has seen rapid deforestation and population growth in recent time.
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- Fluvial Megafans on Earth and Mars , pp. 119 - 140Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023