Abstract From Dr Tim Cohen's Thesis
The partly confined valleys of south-eastern Australia
provide suitable conditions for the formation of vertically
accreted floodplains with laterally stable channels.
Three reaches in the Bellinger catchment in the New
England Fold Belt on the mid-north coast of New South
Wales (NSW) provide sites to assess the attributes
of confined floodplains and the impact of European
settlement on otherwise highly stable systems. The
nature of Late Quaternary floodplain processes in a
bedrock-dominated landscape are investigated, providing
the evolutionary context for contemporary channel processes.
The Bellinger catchment is characterised by an assemblage
of stepped Late Quaternary alluvial units. Late Pleistocene
terraces represent large more competent rivers that
reworked almost entire valley floors, however, a progressive
decline in discharge since the Last Glacial maximum
has resulted in the abandonment of these deposits as
elevated terraces or residual alluvium onlapped by
contemporary floodplains. The Bellinger catchment exhibits
evidence of intrinsic controls on floodplain formation
superimposed over an early-mid Holocene climatic signature.
A fluvially active period from 12 - 3 ka reworked late
Pleistocene terraces and is termed the Nambucca Phase.
In the Bellinger catchment, two floodplain surfaces,
one higher than the other, both started to vertically
accrete from 4 ka onwards, but with some valley locations
remaining vulnerable to episodes of reworking resulting
in substantial units of younger alluvium. The high
floodplain is dominated by horizontally laminated,
vertically accreted sequences, while the low floodplain
is characterised by pronouned cut-and-fill stratigraphy.
In both instances, vertical processes are the dominant
mode of floodplain construction. However, an extensive
AMS radiocarbon chronology supplemented with a limited
OSL investigation suggests that these two surfaces
are not chronologically distinct. In contrast, polycyclic
terraces and floodplains can share much the same elevation
but be very different in age. The assumption that the
continuity of terrace or floodplain profiles along
a valley represents coeval formation is shown to be
frequently invalid for such confined landscapes.
European settlement from c.1840 transformed the fluvial
environment, initiating phases of channel metamorphosis
that do not correspond to a previously accepted model
of channel change based on proposed cyclical changes
in flood activity termed flood- and drought-dominated
regimes. Largely in response to deforestation, the
Bellinger River has undergone rapid adjustment to changing
boundary conditions including measurable channel straightening,
a three-fold increase in width, a five-fold increase
in channel capacity, bed level incision and a re-configuration
of riffle-pool units. These changes have occurred in
periods of above- and below-average flood activity
and are a direct result of landscape clearance for
agriculture, compounded by activities such as within-channel
aggregate extraction. In the latter part of the 20th
century, channel capacity has continued to increase
despite recent increases in reparian vegetation and
a decline in flood frequency.
Wide-scale post-settlement entrenchment has produced
a diverse range of in-channel depositional and erosional
landforms that are not the product of particular discharge
return-periods. Deposited over gravel-bar platforms,
a variety of cut-and-fill benches have developed and
their stratigraphy and form are controlled by their
position within the channel, local sediment supply
and local energy conditions. Bench processes, along
with continued channel expansion, are attributes of
a highly disturbed post-European system that currently
displays non-equilibrium characteristics.
This significant revision of our understanding of
the controlling processes and changing environment
in the partly confined rivers of northern NSW has important
implications for the management and future rehabilitation
of these disturbed systems. The future success of river
management in these valleys requires a reach-scale
assessment of post-European channel responses, but
framed within the context of the longer-term channel
and floodplain formation processes.
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