Record Details

Valley fill and channel incision in Meyer's Canyon, northcentral Oregon

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Title Valley fill and channel incision in Meyer's Canyon, northcentral Oregon
Names Peacock, Kathi A. (creator)
Beschta, Robert L. (advisor)
Date Issued 1994-02-08 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1994
Abstract Meyer's Canyon, a tributary of Bridge Creek in the John Day
Basin, is a deeply incised valley fill in northcentral Oregon. The
current channel is incised to the Cretaceous and Tertiary bedrock.
To determine the precedence of the current incision and the variation
and timing of depositional sequences, the sediments exposed by
incision were examined for clues. The incision evaluated in this
study occurs along the length of the lower valley fill, approximately
2300 meters, with a maximum depth of about 22 meters near the medial
section of the valley. The incision occurred near the beginning of
the 20th century and widened from 1951 to 1979, after which tributary
headward cutting only is occurring at one location. Colluvial aprons
and aggradation within and at the margins of alluvial fans indicate
depositional processes again dominate.
Fill sediments date from the early Holocene. Volume of the
fill prior to incision was estimated to be about 10.8 mcm (million
cubic meters), of which 1.2 mcm (11%) was removed by the incision.
Fill sediments are contributed by coalescing alluvial fans and
alluvial plain sedimentation. The Upper Drainage and Permian
Tributary could potentially donate 67% of the Lower Valley fill
sediments though these portions of the drainage were not studied.
Early sedimentation is dominated by coarse-grained fluvial transport,
followed by numerous thick fine-grained sequences, topped by debris
flow/mud drape couplets where proximal fan processes dominate.
Sediment size decreases and sorting increases toward the fan margins.
Valley plain deposition is currently and was, within the Holocene,
enhanced and influenced by thick vegetation due to perennial
groundwater saturation. Aggradation throughout the Lower Valley fill
has dominated over the course of the Holocene, with only one previous
episode of incision coincident with the Mt. Mazama eruption, about
6900 yrs BP.
Rates of accumulation have changed over the course of the
Holocene. Volume rate of accumulation was 140 m3/yr prior to the
Mazama eruption and 210 m3/yr following the eruption at a proximal fan
location. Within the alluvial fans and plains, sediment
characteristics change with distance from source of sediment. At
more distal fan and alluvial plain locations, an average volume
accumulation rate of 260 m3/yr was estimated prior to the Mazama
eruption, and 130 m3/yr following the eruption. These rates indicate
that input at the proximal locations has been increasing in the late
Holocene and that aggradation may again be dominating Meyer's Canyon
sedimentation.
Recurrence intervals of debris flows (proximal locations) or
events capable of transporting matrix-supported gravels (distal and
alluvial plain locations) show an average recurrence interval of 600
yrs pre-Mazama and 1500 yrs post-Z4azama. At proximal locations, the
shortest interval is after about 1200 yrs before present (BP) when
debris flows occurred about every 500 years. Shorter intervals also
generally occurred in all pre-Mazama locations when coarse-sediment
input was rapid, probably from the Pleistocene-Holocene climate shift
from cool/wet to warmer/drier. Following the Z4azama eruption, the
medial section of the Lower Valley fill had rapid input of coarse
debris, while proximal fan locations had massive fine-grained input.
This is interpreted as a complex response, i.e., rapid runoff
reworked previously deposited sediments at proximal locations and
sediments were deposited at more distal locations. Fine-grained
sediment accumulation followed this period until about 1200 yrs BP.
The strongest evidence for a causal mechanism for incision is a
complex response at the previously saturated wet-meadow, medial
portion of the Lower Valley fill due to loss of riparian vegetation
which maintained an oversteepend alluvial slope. The previously
saturated portion of the Lower Valley fill shows an increasing
transportation slope over time. This slope was probably maintained
by the hydrophytic vegetation, but loss of that vegetation due to
Euroamerican influence could have led to a geomorphic threshold being
crossed on the oversteepened slope and channel incision ensued. The
incision is widest at this point and, if width is used as a surrogate
for length of time of exposure, it is likely that incision began
here.
Genre Thesis
Topic Sedimentation and deposition -- Oregon -- Meyer's Canyon
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/9765

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