Abstract From Chris Doyle's Thesis
The Namubcca River catchment is on the mid-north coast
of New South Wales, Australia, and drains 1,407 km squared
of land east of the Great Dividing Range. This study
examines the pre- and post-settlement record of channel
change in the seven tributaries of the Nambucca catchment
and suggests a scheme for rehabilitation based on current
geomorphic information and the identified record of channel
changes.
The Late Pleistocene histroy, obtained from 19 river
terrace thermoluminescent dates, identifies a remnant
terrace of 78 ka from the Colleambally Phase during Oxygen
Isotope Stage (OIS) 5. Younger terraces correspond to
the Kerarbury Phase (55-35 ka) and the Gum Creek Phase
(31-25 ka), both in OIS 3. However, the majority of terraces
date during the Yanco Phase (20-13 ka) in OIS 2. This
record of late Quaternary activity correlates with periods
of fluvial activity identified on the much larger Nepean
and Murrumbidgee Rivers in southeastern Australia. No
sediment dates have been obtained in the Namubcca catchment
for the period 12 ka to 3 ka, probably because extensive
flushing removed most of that alluvium in what has recently
been termed the Nambucca Phase. Radiocarbon dating of
the Nambucca floodplains has provided 15 dates, all but
one younger than 3000 yrBP. Between 3000 and 2500 yrBP,
the streams changed from gravel, braided and somewhat
laterally active, to stable systems forming floodplains
by vertical accretion and with channels that underwent
occasional avulsion. This laterally stable period continued
through to European settlement in the middle 1800's.
Since settlement there have been four periods of change
in the catchment that have shaped the formation of the
streams in the catchment:
Phase 1 (1830 - 1870) : Settlers selectively logged
the forested catchments for red cedar ( Toona australis
) but during this phase much of the forest on stream
banks and floodplains remained intact.
Phase 2 (1870 - 1896) : Extensive land clearance for
agriculture occured during this phase. A cluster of large
floods in the 1890's triggered a series of nickpoints.
The initial channel instability problems probably date
to this period.
Phase 3 (1897 - 1947) : the period from the late 1890's
to the late 1940's was relatively dry with very few recorded
flood events. However, the earliest available aerial
photographs from 1942 indicated channels straightened
with meanders having cut-offs in the lower part of the
catchment. The catchment appears to have been primed
for major change during the flood dominated phase after
1947.
Phase 4 (1948 - Present) : The change to this phase
was associated with a series of large floods in the late
1940's and early 1950's. Streams experienced substantial
bed lowering, continual overwidening and the exposure
of abundant floodplain sediment, releasing massive amounts
of gravel that had been stored for 3,000 years. The exposed
gravel bars soon became colonised by Casuarina cunninghamiana
, which many landholders believed worsened the problems
of channel instability in the catchment. In an effort
to restore the streams, government authorities from the
1960's to 1980's encouraged the extraction of gravel
and the removal of woody debris from the streams.
This investigation of the modern Nambucca catchment
identifies tributaries floored with fine quartz gravel,
migrating nickpoints, large colonies of Casuarina cunninghamiana
and, bankfull channel capacities that can now convey
1-in-10-year floods and greater. An assessment of catchment
geomorphology, and review of the many river rehabilitation
schemes that have been attempted, recommends that controlling
bed levels is a high priority. In this catchment substantial
government funding is unlikely and the use of 'soft'
engineering methods are required to provide longer term
benefits for river rehabilitation. The construction of
rock ramps appears to be the most suitable method for
setting bed levels and arresting nickpoint retreat. Other
methods such as pin groynes, brush groynes and jacks
have all proven successful in straight reaches experiencing
overwidening and bank retreat. Importantly, effective
management of the riparian zone is required to encourage
growth of native vegetation species in the absence of
livestock.
This study provides a comprehensive review of changes
in catchment behaviour from the late Quaternary to the
modern day; it provides detailed information about the
geomorphology and sedimentology of the channels, and
it completes a detailed assessment of rehabiliation schemes.
As such it presents stream managers with a methodology
for making scientifically based decisions on river rehabilitation. |