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Downstream changes in floodplain sedimentation and their effects on channel avulsion in stream-dominated alluvial fans: The Cretaceous Duwon Formation in the southern Korean Peninsula

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SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
卷 456, 期 -, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2023.106473

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Hydrodynamics; Compensational stacking pattern; Progradational stacking pattern; Crevasse channel and splay deposits; Alluvial ridge growth

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The study investigates the sediment dispersal patterns and avulsion processes of stream-dominated alluvial fans in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula, focusing on the influence of downstream changes in hydrodynamics on floodplain sedimentation. The findings suggest that hydrodynamic variations control sediment deposition and channel avulsion, with important implications for understanding the dynamics of alluvial fans.
Stream-dominated alluvial fans are formed by the periodic channel avulsion running on their surfaces and are characterized by the downstream changes in hydrodynamics of stream flows and flood frequency. The spatial variations in hydrodynamics also control the sedimentation on the floodplain, which is important for sediment dispersal patterns on the stream-dominated alluvial fans as they feed back into channel avulsion processes. To understand the influence of downstream changes in hydrodynamics on the floodplain sedimentation and associated channel avulsion processes, we studied the Cretaceous Duwon Formation in the southern part of the Korean Peninsula. The Duwon Formation unconformably overlies the Paleoproterozoic basements and consists of gravelly braided stream deposits (FA-1), sandy braided stream deposits (FA-2), and calcretes-bearing flood -plain deposits (FA-3). Close to the basements, FA-1 shows the radial paleoflow patterns, and the size of sediments and the ratio of channel to floodplain deposits decrease downstream over a relatively short distance (<7 km). This indicates that the Duwon Formation was deposited in the stream-dominated alluvial fans under arid to semi-arid climatic conditions, which can be classified into the proximal, medial, and distal zones.In the medial zone, the floodplain deposits are composed of the underlying, purple-colored sandstones and the overlying, compensational stacked crevasse channel and splay deposits (ca. 19 m thick) with the unsystematic paleoflow directions, finally overlain by the sandy braided stream deposits. In contrast, in the distal zone, the floodplain fines are composed of homogeneous clay and silt with calcretes and vegetation traces. These flood -plain fines are interbedded with and overlain by the progradational stacked, coarsening-and thickening -upward trending, crevasse channel and splay deposits (ca. 18 m thick) with the constant paleoflow directions to those of the overlying sandy braided stream deposits. In the medial zone, a relatively large volume of discharge of the stream floods resulted in the frequent overbank flooding via the multiple breaching points and the con-comitant growth of alluvial ridges by the combined effects of in-channel bed aggradation and compensational stacked crevasse channel and splay deposits resulted in a shift in the flow pathway of the sandy braided streams. In the distal zone, the floodplain fines containing calcretes and vegetation traces suggest the longer periods of non-deposition, providing sufficient time for the vegetation development. Once the channel levees collapsed, the vegetated channel levees stabilized the breaching point, and the breaching point progressively incised by the multiple flooding events, causing susceptibility to overbank flooding. Crevasse channel flows via the breaching point and associated overbank floodwaters led to a continuous supply of the coarse-grained sediments stacking on the cohesive, vegetated floodplain fines, with an increase in the cross-floodplain topographic gradient. As a result, crevasse channels were able to advance the distal floodplains, resulting in the development of progradational stacking pattern. With the cross-floodplain topographic gradient, the deposition of these erodible overbank flooding sediments on the cohesive, vegetated floodplain fines provided an alternative route for the parent channel, resulting in channel avulsion. Thus, this study suggests that downstream changes in hydrodynamics and associated floodplain sedimentation are important for channel avulsion and hence control the sediment dispersal patterns of coarse-grained sediments on the stream-dominated alluvial fans.(c) 2023 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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