EGU24-18668, updated on 11 Mar 2024
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-18668
EGU General Assembly 2024
© Author(s) 2024. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Bedload sediment dynamics in two contrasting alpine glacier headwater catchments

Simon Cook1, Darrel Swift2, Kristen Cook3, Christoff Andermann4, Michael Dietze5,6, William Wenban2, and Rory White2
Simon Cook et al.
  • 1Division of Energy, Environment and Society, University of Dundee, Dundee, United Kingdom (s.y.cook@dundee.ac.uk)
  • 2Department of Geography, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom (d.a.swift@sheffield.ac.uk)
  • 3ISTerre · Department of Earth Sciences, Université de Grenoble, Grenoble (kristen.cook@univ-grenoble-alpes.fr)
  • 4Géosciences Rennes, Université de Rennes, Rennes, France (christoff.andermann@univ-rennes1.fr)
  • 5Georg August University, Faculty of Geosciences and Geography, Göttingen, Germany (michael.dietze@uni-goettingen.de)
  • 6GFZ Potsdam, Section 4.6 Geomorphology, Potsdam, Germany

Glaciated landscapes are showing an amplified reaction to global climate change. Glacial streams are the primary conveyor belts of the incipient sediment cascade, implementing the export of glacially scoured sediment to lower reaches, where the exported sediment controls fluvial geometry, valley floor evolution and ecosystem functioning, water reservoir lifetime and energy production in several alpine countries. Despite that importance, especially of the coarse bedload fraction, there is a striking lack of knowledge about the timing, magnitude and control factors of bedload flux in glacial streams. This is predominantly due to the difficulties to obtain such flux data by classic empirical approaches that require direct in-stream sampling. Here, we pursue a seismic approach to bedload transport quantification, where geophysical sensors are installed along the banks of glacial streams that continuously record ground motion caused by both the turbulent flow of the stream and coarse particle impact on the river bed. We installed small geophone networks along straight reaches of streams draining the glacierised catchments of Oberaargletscher and Steingletscher in Switzerland and recorded the target signals for several days in August 2022, when the melt driven, diurnal river stage fluctuated significantly. River level, turbidity and stream geometry were also observed. Ground parameters for the inverse seismic-model approach were determined using an active seismic survey. We present results of the instrumentation concepts, parameter estimation and data inversion. This allows a discussion of the temporal variability, non-linearity and site-specific nature of hydraulic and sediment transport patterns in catchments where sediment export is dominated by glacial processes.

How to cite: Cook, S., Swift, D., Cook, K., Andermann, C., Dietze, M., Wenban, W., and White, R.: Bedload sediment dynamics in two contrasting alpine glacier headwater catchments, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-18668, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-18668, 2024.