Geomorphic Changes of the Scott River Alluvial Fan in Relation to a Four-Day Flood Event

A four-day glacier-melt flood (13–16 August 2013) caused abrupt geomorphic changes in the proglacial gravel-bed Scott River, which drains the small (10 km 2 ) Scott Glacier catchment (SW Svalbard). This type of flood occurs on Svalbard increasingly during periods of abnormally warm or rainy weather...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Water
Main Author: Waldemar Kociuba
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/w15071368
https://doaj.org/article/a997aaca5b5a4e91ae0e4f07477e7ff4
Description
Summary:A four-day glacier-melt flood (13–16 August 2013) caused abrupt geomorphic changes in the proglacial gravel-bed Scott River, which drains the small (10 km 2 ) Scott Glacier catchment (SW Svalbard). This type of flood occurs on Svalbard increasingly during periods of abnormally warm or rainy weather in summer or early autumn, and the probability of occurrence grows in direct proportion to the increase in temperature and/or precipitation intensity. In the summer of 2013, during the measurement season, the highest daily precipitation (17 mm) occurred on 13 August. During the following four days, it constituted in total 47 mm, i.e., 50% of the precipitation total for the measurement period of 2013. The largest flood in 20 years was caused by high precipitation with a synchronous rise in temperature from about 1.0 to 8.6 °C. These values exceeded multi-year averages (32 mm and 5.0 °C, respectively) at an average discharge of 0.9 m 3 /s (melt season mean 1986–2011). These conditions caused a rapid and abrupt response of the river with the dominant (90%) glacier-fed. The increase in discharge to 4.6 m 3 /s, initiated by the glacial flood, mobilized significant amounts of sediment in the river bed and channel. Geomorphic changes within the alluvial fan as an area of 58,940 m 2 , located at the mouth of the Scott River, were detected by multi-sites terrestrial laser scanning using a Leica Scan Station C10 and then estimated using Geomorphic Change Detection (GCD) software. The changes found involved 39% of the alluvial fan area (23,231 m 2 ). The flood-induced total area of lowering (erosion) covered 26% of the alluvial fan (6035 m 2 ), resulting in the removal of 1183 ± 121 m 3 of sediment volume. During the final phase of the flood, two times more sediment (1919 ± 344 m 3 ) was re-deposited within the alluvial fan surface, causing significant aggradation on 74% of its area (17,196 m 2 ). These geomorphic changes resulted in an average lowering (erosion) of the alluvial fan surface of 0.2 m and an average rising ...