|
Benjamin Mackey,
Caltech: LiDAR Reveals Ancient Lake in California's Eel River
November 15, 2011
A catastrophic landslide 22,500 years ago dammed the upper reaches of
northern California's Eel River, forming a 30-mile-long lake which has
since disappeared. It left a living legacy found today in the genes of
the region's steelhead trout.
View
down the Eel River, with the reconstructed ancient lake surface in blue.
Using remote-sensing technology known as airborne Light Detection and
Ranging (LiDAR) and hand-held global-positioning-systems (GPS) units,
scientists recently found evidence for a late Pleistocene,
landslide-dammed lake along the river.
Today the Eel river is 200 miles long, carved into the ground from high
in the California Coast Ranges to the river's mouth in the Pacific Ocean
in Humboldt County.
The evidence for the ancient landslide, which, scientists say, blocked
the river with a 400-foot-wall of loose rock and debris, is detailed
this week in a paper appearing on-line in the journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
Nefus
Peak, the source of the ancient landslide that formed the lake.
The research provides a rare glimpse into the geological history of this
rapidly evolving mountainous region.
"This study reminds us that there are still significant surprises to be
unearthed about past landscape dynamics and their broad impacts," said
Paul Cutler, program director in the National Science Foundation's
Division of Earth Sciences, which funded the research. "For example, it
provides valuable information for assessing modern landslide hazard
potential in this region."
It also helps to explain emerging evidence from other studies that show
a dramatic decrease in the amount of sediment deposited from the river
in the ocean just offshore at about the same time period, says lead
author of the paper Benjamin Mackey of the California Institute of
Technology.
"Perhaps of most interest, the presence of this landslide dam also
provides an explanation for the results of previous research on the
genetics of steelhead trout in the Eel River," Mackey said.
The
modern Eel River is shown here, in blue. The landslide scar is visible
in black.
In that study, scientists found a striking relationship between two
types of ocean-going steelhead in the river--a genetic similarity not
seen among summer-run and winter-run steelhead in other nearby
waterways.
An interbreeding of the two fish, in a process known as genetic
introgression, may have occurred among the fish brought together while
the river was dammed, Mackey said.
"The dam likely would have been impassable to the fish migrating
upstream, meaning both ecotypes would have been forced to spawn and
inadvertently breed downstream of the dam. This period of gene flow
between the two types of steelhead can explain the genetic similarity
observed today."
Once the dam burst, the fish would have reoccupied their preferred
spawning grounds and resumed different genetic trajectories.
"The damming of the river was a dramatic, punctuated event that greatly
altered the landscape," said co-author Joshua Roering, a geologist at
the University of Oregon.
The
Eel River at the dam site. Much of the evidence for the dam has been
eroded over time.
"Although current physical evidence
for the landslide dam and ancient lake is subtle, its effects are
recorded in the Pacific Ocean and persist in the genetic make-up of
today's Eel River steelhead," said Roering. "It's rare for scientists to
be able to connect the dots between such diverse phenomena."
The lake formed by the landslide, the researchers theorize, covered
about 18 square miles.
After the dam was breached, the flow of water would have generated one
of North America's largest landslide-dam outburst floods.
Landslide activity and erosion have erased much of the evidence for the
now-gone lake. Without the acquisition of LiDAR mapping, the lake's
existence may have never been discovered, the scientists said.
The
lake's shore cut into the opposite hillslope, forming broad, flat areas
shown in contours.
The area affected by the landslide-caused dam accounts for about 58
percent of the modern Eel River watershed. Based on today's general
erosion rates, the geologists believe that the lake could have filled in
with sediment within about 600 years.
"The presence of a dam of this size was unexpected in the Eel River,
given the abundance of easily eroded sandstone and mudstone, which are
generally not considered strong enough to form long-lived dams," Mackey
said.
He
and colleagues were drawn to the Eel River--among the most-studied
erosion systems in the world--to study large, slow-moving landslides.
"While analyzing the elevation of terraces along the river, we
discovered they clustered at a common elevation rather than decreased in
elevation downstream paralleling the river profile, as would be expected
for river terraces," said Mackey.
"That was the first sign of something unusual, and it clued us into the
possibility of an ancient lake."
The third co-author on the paper is Michael Lamb, a geologist at the
California Institute of Technology.
The National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping also provided LiDAR data
used in the project. |