Science Inventory

CHANGES IN LOWLAND FLOODPLAIN SEDIMENTATION PROCESSES: PRE-DISTURBANCE TO POST-REHABILITATION, COSUMNES RIVER, CA. (R825433)

Citation:

Florsheim, J. L. AND J. F. Mount. CHANGES IN LOWLAND FLOODPLAIN SEDIMENTATION PROCESSES: PRE-DISTURBANCE TO POST-REHABILITATION, COSUMNES RIVER, CA. (R825433). 56(3-4):305-323, (2003).

Description:

During the late Holocene, sediment deposition on the lowland Cosumnes River floodplain, CA has depended on factors that varied temporally and spatially, such as basin subsidence, sea level rise, flow, and sediment supply from both the Sacramento River system and from the Cosumnes River system itself, and anthropogenic changes. Through field investigations and analyses of historical maps, bridge core logs, and sediment size distributions, we link hydrogeomorphic processes to three stages of floodplain sedimentation on the lowland Cosumnes River. Stage I (1000–200 YBP) combined late Holocene pre-disturbance flood basin overflow and anastomosing river processes deposited spatially variable sediment consisting of gray–blue clay (87% clay) interlayered with relatively thin coarser sediment. Pre-disturbance Holocene deposition rates of up to ~3.0 mm/year kept pace with sea level rise and tectonic basin subsidence. Stage II (200 to ~10 YBP) anthropogenic disturbances caused a rapid increase in floodplain sedimentation rates up to 25 mm/year between 1849 and ~1920, and deposited a relatively coarser reddish-brown sandy clay (~40% clay) layer that overlies the basin deposits. Between ~1920 and 1990 AD, sedimentation was greatly limited on the lower Cosumnes floodplain because levees inhibited connectivity between both the Sacramento and Cosumnes River systems and the Cosumnes floodplain. During this stage, the density of channel segments in the anastomosing river floodplain decreased by 30% as agricultural activities filled secondary channels and leveled floodplain topography. During Stage III (~10 YBP to the present), post-rehabilitation floodplain sand splay complex sediment deposited after 1998 AD resulted from intentionally breaching levees to promote habitat at the Cosumnes River Preserve. The splay complex is dominated by medium to very coarse sand with finer intervening layers. The post-rehabilitation splay complex overlies the older basin deposits in a generally upward coarsening sequence that reflects depositional processes and land use changes that continue to affect the lowland Cosumnes River floodplain.

Author Keywords: Floodplain sedimentation; Anastomosing river; Sacramento Flood Basin; Sand splay complex; Rehabilitation; Restoration

Record Details:

Record Type:DOCUMENT( JOURNAL/ PEER REVIEWED JOURNAL)
Product Published Date:01/01/2003
Record Last Revised:12/22/2005
Record ID: 84827