The Lasting Legacy of Megaflood Boulder Deposition in Mountain Rivers

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Abstract

Infrequent, large-magnitude discharge (>106 m3/s) outburst floods—megafloods—can play a major role in landscape evolution. Prehistoric glacial lake outburst megafloods transported and deposited large boulders (≥4 m), yet few studies consider their potential lasting impact on river processes and form. We use a numerical model, constrained by observed boulder size distributions, to investigate the fluvial response to boulder deposition by megaflooding in the Yarlung-Siang River, eastern Himalaya. Results show that boulder deposition changes local channel steepness (ksn) up to ∼180% compared to simulations without boulder bars, introducing >100 meter-scale knickpoints to the channel that can be sustained for >20 kyr. Simulations demonstrate that deposition of boulders in a single megaflood can have a greater influence on ksn than another common source of fluvial boulders: incision-rate-dependent delivery of boulders from hillslopes. Through widespread boulder deposition, megafloods leave a lasting legacy of channel disequilibrium that compounds over multiple floods and persists for millennia.

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APA

Morey, S. M., Shobe, C. M., Huntington, K. W., Lang, K. A., Johnson, A. G., & Duvall, A. R. (2024). The Lasting Legacy of Megaflood Boulder Deposition in Mountain Rivers. Geophysical Research Letters, 51(1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL105066

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