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Megaflood sedimentary valley fill: Altai Mounatins, Siberia

Megaflood sedimentary valley fill: Altai Mounatins, Siberia
Megaflood sedimentary valley fill: Altai Mounatins, Siberia
During the Quaternary, the Altai Mountains of south-central Siberia sustained ice-caps and valley glaciers. Glaciers or ice lobes emanating from plateaux blocked the outlet of the Chuja-Kuray intermontane basins and impounded meltwater to form large ice-dammed lakes up to 600 km3 capacity. On occasion the ice dams failed and the lakes emptied catastrophically. The megafloods that resulted were deep, fast-flowing and heavily charged with sand and gravel, the sediment being sourced from the lake basins and also entrained along the course of the flood-ways. The floods were confined within mountain valleys of the present-day Rivers Chuja and Katun, but large quantities of sediment were deposited over a distance of more than 70km from the dam site in tributary river-mouths, re-entrants in the confining valley walls (e.g. cirques) and on the inside of major valley bends. The main depositional units that resulted are giant bars which blocked the entrances to tributaries and temporarily impeded normal drainage from the tributaries into the main-stem valley such that minor lakes were impounded within the tributaries behind the bars. Fine sediment from the tributaries accumulated in these lakes as local lacustrine units. Later the bars were breached by the tributary flows and the local lakes were drained. Sections of the giant bar sediments and the local lacustrine units are used to describe the nature of the megaflood valley fill which was deposited primarily in Marine Isotope Stage 2. Although there is evidence of the Chuja-Kuray lake being in existence within Marine Isotope Stage 4 there are no flood sediments unequivocably ascribed to this period. Descriptions of the sedimentology and stratigraphy of the valley-fill are interpreted within a context of proposed flow mechanisms associated with deposition of the various facies and thus provide some indication of the flood dynamics

0521868521
243-264
Cambridge University Press
Carling, Paul A.
8d252dd9-3c88-4803-81cc-c2ec4c6fa687
Martini, Peter
ff485908-3877-4050-b915-db29c11b9193
Herget, Jurgen
e0814c7c-58ec-49de-b20f-4cfd3650ed2c
Borodavko, Pavel
6cff8326-ad51-4635-a8d2-1a3635afc653
Parnachov, Sergei
4ededd9b-bb41-492a-9071-cdb9ab497682
Burr, Devon
Carling, Paul
Baker, Vic
Carling, Paul A.
8d252dd9-3c88-4803-81cc-c2ec4c6fa687
Martini, Peter
ff485908-3877-4050-b915-db29c11b9193
Herget, Jurgen
e0814c7c-58ec-49de-b20f-4cfd3650ed2c
Borodavko, Pavel
6cff8326-ad51-4635-a8d2-1a3635afc653
Parnachov, Sergei
4ededd9b-bb41-492a-9071-cdb9ab497682
Burr, Devon
Carling, Paul
Baker, Vic

Carling, Paul A., Martini, Peter, Herget, Jurgen, Borodavko, Pavel and Parnachov, Sergei (2009) Megaflood sedimentary valley fill: Altai Mounatins, Siberia. In, Burr, Devon, Carling, Paul and Baker, Vic (eds.) Megaflooding on Earth and Mars. Cambridge, UK. Cambridge University Press, pp. 243-264.

Record type: Book Section

Abstract

During the Quaternary, the Altai Mountains of south-central Siberia sustained ice-caps and valley glaciers. Glaciers or ice lobes emanating from plateaux blocked the outlet of the Chuja-Kuray intermontane basins and impounded meltwater to form large ice-dammed lakes up to 600 km3 capacity. On occasion the ice dams failed and the lakes emptied catastrophically. The megafloods that resulted were deep, fast-flowing and heavily charged with sand and gravel, the sediment being sourced from the lake basins and also entrained along the course of the flood-ways. The floods were confined within mountain valleys of the present-day Rivers Chuja and Katun, but large quantities of sediment were deposited over a distance of more than 70km from the dam site in tributary river-mouths, re-entrants in the confining valley walls (e.g. cirques) and on the inside of major valley bends. The main depositional units that resulted are giant bars which blocked the entrances to tributaries and temporarily impeded normal drainage from the tributaries into the main-stem valley such that minor lakes were impounded within the tributaries behind the bars. Fine sediment from the tributaries accumulated in these lakes as local lacustrine units. Later the bars were breached by the tributary flows and the local lakes were drained. Sections of the giant bar sediments and the local lacustrine units are used to describe the nature of the megaflood valley fill which was deposited primarily in Marine Isotope Stage 2. Although there is evidence of the Chuja-Kuray lake being in existence within Marine Isotope Stage 4 there are no flood sediments unequivocably ascribed to this period. Descriptions of the sedimentology and stratigraphy of the valley-fill are interpreted within a context of proposed flow mechanisms associated with deposition of the various facies and thus provide some indication of the flood dynamics

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More information

Published date: 2009
Organisations: Environmental Processes & Change

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 69363
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/69363
ISBN: 0521868521
PURE UUID: 05697bc7-b482-4523-8560-5f2791196869

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 05 Nov 2009
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 17:05

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Contributors

Author: Paul A. Carling
Author: Peter Martini
Author: Jurgen Herget
Author: Pavel Borodavko
Author: Sergei Parnachov
Editor: Devon Burr
Editor: Paul Carling
Editor: Vic Baker

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