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- Title
Use of composite fingerprints to determine the provenance of the contemporary suspended sediment load transported by rivers
- Authors
Walling, D. E.; Collins, A. L.; Leeks, G. J. L.
- Abstract
Sediment fingerprinting appears to offer a valuable alternative to direct monitoring for elucidating the provenance of suspended sedimentand the relative importance of spatial zones or subcatchments comprising larger (>500 km2) drainage basins. Against this background, a quantitative composite fingerprinting technique, incorporating both statistically verified multicomponent signatures and a multivariate sediment-mixing model, has been employed to determine the spatial origin of contemporary suspended sediment transported from the upper and middle reaches of the River Exe (601 km2) and River Severn (4325 km2) basins, UK. Spatial origin is addressed in terms of the relative contribution from three distinct geological subareas constituting each study basin. The consistency of the composite fingerprinting approach is examined using the estimates for mean and seasonal variations in source area contributions and also a comparison between the results obtained for individual flood events and alternative lines of evidence provided by flood travel times and the spatial distribution of precipitation. It is argued that fingerprinting estimates for sediment provenance are consistent with existing information on suspended sediment yields from different subcatchments within the study basins, although in the Severn, the role of storage and remobilization in producing signature 'averaging' may complicate comparison of the fingerprinting data with typical floodwater routing times. Validation represents the greatest problem for the cost-benefitof fingerprinting and scope still exists for further refinement of the procedures involved.
- Subjects
GEOLOGY; STATISTICS; METHODOLOGY; GEOMORPHOLOGY; HYDROLOGY
- Publication
Earth Surface Processes & Landforms, 1998, Vol 23, Issue 1, p31
- ISSN
0197-9337
- Publication type
Article