Abstract
Subsidence due to peat compaction may have important implications in alluvial floodplains, because it leads to wetland loss, land inundation, and damage to buildings and infrastructure. Furthermore, it potentially influences spatial and temporal river sedimentation patterns, and hence the evolution of alluvial floodplains. As the vast majority of peatlands occur in cold temperate regions, alluvial plains situated in such areas are most susceptible to these implications. To determine which locations within alluvial floodplains are most vulnerable to high amounts of compaction-induced subsidence, it is necessary to quantify compaction and to identify which factors influence the amount and rate of peat compaction. For this, we carried out field work in the Cumberland Marshes (east-central Saskatchewan, Canada) guided by the following two questions: (1) how much peat compaction has occurred over the past decades to centuries, and (2) which factors control the amount and rate of peat compaction at the same timescale. To address these questions, we used methods involving construction of stratigraphic cross sections, organic-matter content and bulk-density measurements, and radiocarbon dating. A new sampling device was devised to sample uncompacted peat in the field. Results show that peat layers have compacted up to 43%, within a few centuries, with compaction rates of up to 6.08 mm/yr. The dominant factors influencing peat compaction are: (1) organic-matter content, (2) stress imposed on a peat layer, and, to a lesser extent, (3) plant species composition. In an alluvial setting, crevasse splays and natural levees are sites that are most susceptible to high amounts of peat compaction at short timescales (10(0)-10(2) years). Sheet-like splay deposits initially compact underlying peat uniformly, whereas differential compaction commonly occurs beneath natural levees due to lateral variations in sediment thickness. Subsidence due to peat compaction creates additional accommodation space and hence locally enhances floodplain sedimentation rates.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 155-166 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Journal of Sedimentary Research |
Volume | 80 |
Issue number | 1-2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2010 |
Funding
Chris Roosendaal, Ingwer Bos, Willem Toonen, and our local guide Gary Carriere are thanked for their assistance during the fieldwork in the Cumberland Marshes. We thank Neileke van Asch for selecting macrofossils of terrestrial vegetation suitable for radiocarbon dating, which was performed at the R.J. van de Graaff laboratory, Utrecht University. This research was funded by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research-Earth and Life Sciences (NWO-ALW, project 814.01.014) and Utrecht University, Faculty of Geosciences. This paper benefited greatly from reviews by Jackie Huntoon, Greg Nation, and an anonymous reviewer. The three Appendices are available from JSR's Data Archive: http://www.sepm.org/jsr/jsr_data_archive.asp.
Keywords
- SASKATCHEWAN RIVER DELTA
- FLUVIAL SYSTEM
- 1870S AVULSION
- HOLOCENE
- PATTERNS
- CALIBRATION
- DEPOSITION
- LEVEL
- BASIN