ONDRÁČKOVÁ, Lenka, Martin HANÁČEK a Daniel NÝVLT. Comparing the effects of material sources and fluvial processes on the gravel fraction of the Muninelva braided stream, Central Svalbard. In Jan Kavan, Alex Bernardová. Polar Ecology Conference 2016. České Budějovice: Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, 2016, s. 91-92, 140 s. ISBN 978-80-7394-594-7.
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Základní údaje
Originální název Comparing the effects of material sources and fluvial processes on the gravel fraction of the Muninelva braided stream, Central Svalbard
Autoři ONDRÁČKOVÁ, Lenka, Martin HANÁČEK a Daniel NÝVLT.
Vydání České Budějovice, Polar Ecology Conference 2016, od s. 91-92, 140 s. 2016.
Nakladatel Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia
Další údaje
Originální jazyk angličtina
Typ výsledku Stať ve sborníku
Obor Zemský magnetismus, geodesie, geografie
Stát vydavatele Česká republika
Utajení není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Forma vydání tištěná verze "print"
Organizační jednotka Přírodovědecká fakulta
ISBN 978-80-7394-594-7
Klíčová slova anglicky gravel bed braided river, sediment sources, clast shape characteristics, Muninelva, Svalbard
Příznaky Mezinárodní význam
Změnil Změnila: RNDr. Lenka Ondráčková, Ph.D., učo 375861. Změněno: 23. 9. 2016 14:21.
Anotace
Muninelva River flows down a narrow mountain valley (Munindalen) in Dickson Land, Western Spitsbergen, 7 km west of Petuniabukta. Muninelva River flows from two connected glacier tongues (Muninbreen Glacier) in the NNW part of the valley and flows along the valley axis down to its mouth in Mimerdalen Valley at the SSE end of the valley. The river is 6 km long and its channel belt is 50–250 m wide. It has a nature of a valley-train sensu Hambrey (1995). It changes into a braided outwash fan (sensu Hambrey 1995) at its mouth to the wide Mimerdalen valley. First-order channel in the valley train delimits bar assemblages with compound and unit bars and second-order channels cutting across the bar surfaces (Lunt and Bridge 2004). The first-order channel is branching on the outwash fan. The river is dominantly pebble-cobble gravely along the entire stream. Muninelva River has the two main material sources according to their position in respect of the stream: I. head source – Muninbreen Glacier and its terminal moraine-mound complexes; II lateral sources – colluvial and alluvial fans, terminoglacial fan from a lateral glacier and bedrock in the channel belt banks (Devonian sandstone and conglomerate). All sources differ in the shape of their clastic material. Important effect of the fluvial transport on the size and shape of the clasts (downstream fining and increased roundness) could be assumed basing on the length of Muninelva River and well-developed channels and bars. This assumption has been studied using the analysis of the clast in the fraction 64–256 mm, which were sampled along the entire length of the river, as well as from source sediments. Bedrock provides implicitly angular debris and well-rounded clasts originates from conglomerates, so they could not be confused with the material originating from other sediments. Our results show that the clast grain size and roundness are dominantly controlled by material sources and not by the fluvial activity. Significant fluvial effects could only be found in the distal and axial part of the stream. Long morphologically developed braided stream is therefore not sufficiently competent to significantly modify the material from their sources, which resembles braided outwash fans of Hørbyebreen and Bertilbreen in the same area (Hanáček et al. 2013). This fact is of great interest for possible interpretations of fossil gravely braided streams without a preserved morphology, which could resemble alluvial fans basing on clast shape characteristics.
VytisknoutZobrazeno: 2. 5. 2024 21:55