(eng)
Tectonic and geomorphic processes drive landscape
evolution over different spatial and temporal scales.
In mountainous environments, river incision sets the pace of
landscape evolution, and hillslopes respond to channel incision
by, e.g., gully retreat, bank erosion, and landslides.
Sediment produced during stochastic landslide events leads
to mobilization of soil and regolith on the slopes that can
later be transported by gravity and water to the river network
during phases of hillslope–channel geomorphic coupling.
The mechanisms and scales of sediment connectivity
mitigate the propagation of sediment pulses throughout
the landscape and eventually drive the contribution of landslides
to the overall sediment budget of mountainous catchments.
However, to constrain the timing of the sediment cascade,
the inherent stochastic nature of sediment and transport
through landsliding requires an integrated approach accounting
for different space scales and timescales. In this paper,
we examine the sediment production on hillslopes and evacuation
to the river network of one landslide, i.e. the Schimbrig
earthflow, affecting the Entle River catchment located in
the foothills of the Central Swiss Alps. We quantified sediment
fluxes over annual, decadal, and millennial timescales
using respectively unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)–structurefrom-
motion (SfM) techniques, classic photogrammetry, and
in situ produced cosmogenic radionuclides. At the decadal
scale, sediment fluxes quantified for the period 1962–1998
are highly variable and are not directly linked to the intensity
of sediment redistribution on the hillslope. At the millennial
scale, landslide occurrence perturbs the regional positive
linear relationship between sediment fluxes and downstream
distance as the landslide-affected Schimbrig catchment is
characterized by a decrease in sediment fluxes and a strong
variability. Importantly, the average decadal sediment flux
of the Schimbrig catchment is 2 orders of magnitude higher
than millennial sediment fluxes computed over the same spatial
extent. The discrepancy between decadal and millennial
sediment fluxes, combined to the highly variable annual sediment
evacuation from the hillslopes to the channel network
suggest that phases of hillslope–channel geomorphic coupling
are short and intermittent. During most of the time,
the first-order catchments are transport-limited and sediment
dynamics in the headwaters are uncoupled from the fluvial
systems. In addition, our unique spatio-temporal database of
sediment fluxes highlights the transient character of the intense
geomorphic activity of the Schimbrig catchment in a
regional context. Its decadal sediment flux is of the same order
of magnitude as the background sediment flux going out
of the entire Entle River catchment. Over the last 50 years,
the Schimbrig catchment, which represents ca. 1% of the entire
study area, provides 65% of the sediments that the entire
Entle catchment will supply over the millennial scale. These
results suggest that episodic supply of sediment from landslides
during intermittent phases of hillslope–channel geomorphic
coupling are averaged out when considering sediment
fluxes at longer timescales and larger spatial scales.
Clapuyt, François ; Vanacker, Veerle ; Christl, Marcus ; Van Oost, Kristof ; Schlunegger, Fritz ; et. al. Spatio-temporal dynamics of sediment transfer systems in landslide-prone Alpine catchments. In: Solid Earth, Vol. 10, p. 1489–1503 (2019)