Geomorphology of the Sulden River basin (Italian Alps) with a focus on sediment connectivity

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Abstract

An area-wide digital geomorphological map consisting of 12,180 non-overlapping polygons was created for the Sulden river basin (South Tyrol, Italian Alps) with the purpose to carry out a GIS-based sediment connectivity analysis. Thirty-one landform types were defined with respect to their role within sediment cascades. As such, the classification and the related symbology partly differ from a traditional geomorphological map where several areal objects are frequently represented by scaled and rotated point symbols. The catchment (∼130 km²), exhibits a high geomorphological variability as well as relatively large glacierized areas. We used the geomorphological map for a first qualitative estimate of the main differences between the two major sub-basins concerning the components of the sediment cascades: while the Trafoi sub-catchment exhibits a high number of small landslides and debris flow channels (i.e. source and transport landforms), the Sulden sub-catchment is rather characterized by large proglacial and talus landforms (i.e. temporary storage landforms).

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Buter, A., Spitzer, A., Comiti, F., & Heckmann, T. (2020). Geomorphology of the Sulden River basin (Italian Alps) with a focus on sediment connectivity. Journal of Maps, 16(2), 890–901. https://doi.org/10.1080/17445647.2020.1841036

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