Paleoflood
Geomorphology in central Australia
Mary C.
Bourke, Planetary
Science Institute
Funding:
The Honda Corporation (through the
Smithsonian Institution)
The Department of Lands Planning and the Environment of the
National
Greenhouse Advisory
Flooding from storms, hurricanes and
cyclones is a natural but sometimes catastrophic environmental hazard. Climatic
models predict that enhanced greenhouse gas levels will cause an increase in
the size and frequency of floods in many regions around the world. However, the
climate data we use in predictive models are mostly derived from 50-to 100-year
long instrumental records (precipitation and river flow gauges). These records
are too short to include the infrequently occurring extreme events that cause
such devastation. Geomorphologists have found that deserts are ideal locations
for the preservation of evidence of catastrophic floods. This is partly due to
the fact that the rivers flow infrequently, vegetation is sparse and human
impact is low. By applying geological techniques to ancient flood deposits in
deserts we can get a proxy record of extreme rainfalls. This will enable a
better understanding of the nature of past climate variability, the timing of
extreme floods and their effect on the landscape. These data can improve our
ability to predict the way in which climate may be changing and allow us to
develop models on how desert environments respond to and store information on
these events.

Figure
1: The longitudinal dunes system of the
The dry bed
of the
dense population of gum trees (Eucalyptus camaldulensis and Eucalyptus microtheca).
The Simpson Desert in central Australia
is composed of a series of longitudinal dunes formed by wind, that were last active approximately 20,000
years ago (Figure 1). Along the desert's north western boundary, the
In arid regions, large floods can
dominate fluvial landform evolution. Field sites in central

Figure
2: An enhanced false colour MSS satellite image
of the
The river
flows from the
The area
where the flood has deposited sediment into the dune field is well defined
(shades of yellow to orange to brown to purple) by different vegetation types.
Satellite images allow unprecedented access to locations on the Earth's surface
that have traditionally been poorly studied because of their remote location.
Satellite data can be processed to identify different landforms (e.g.,
mountains, sand dunes, rivers) and can identify the deposits and channels of
past floods. The enhanced Multi spectral scanner (MSS) satellite image shown in
Figure 2 has been adjusted to highlight the different landforms of the lower

Figure 3 Surveying across the wide flood channel
using a laser system.
Brian Garvey holds the
reflective target during the survey.
In this figure the flood
sediments are covered by a thin veneer of aeolian sands.

Figure
4 Flood deposits are excavated using pit exposures and sand augers

Figure
5 Typical flood channel sediment textures (gravel supported in a medium
sand matrix).
River gorges (see Figure 6) do preserve
spectacular evidence of large floods. For example, the presence of large
boulder bars (Figure 7) and slack water deposits (Figure 8) testify to the potential
preservation of evidence of floods in gorges but these records tend not to be
very long. This is because in steep and confined reaches, the high energy of
floods remove the fine grained deposits emplaced by
previous floods. Downstream, in the unconfined locations the flood water moves
laterally and flow energy decreases. This leads to extensive deposition of
flood sediments over a wide area (see Figure 2). The preservation of the flood
deposits is enhanced by the tendency of the channel to shift its location after
a small number of floods and therefore abandon its former path.

Figure
6 The absence of large boulders on the channel floor that periodically
fall from the gorge walls,
indicate the high energy flood flows through this reach of
the

Figure
7 These large
boulders have been transported by floods to a location downstream from the
narrow,
high-energy reach of the Hale Gorge seen in Figure 6. View
looking downstream, Dr. Blau as scale.
A sediment dating technique known as
Optically Stimulated Luminescence estimates the time that has elapsed since
quartz sand grains were exposed to the sun (i.e. the time since they were deposited
and buried by the flood). This analysis has recently determined that two
catastrophic floods occurred within the last 1,000 years in the

Figure
8 Floods also carry
fine sediment high in the water column and deposit it in caves, on ledges and
in the mouths of tributaries.
These slack
water deposits can be used to indicate the height of floods. This slack water
deposit lies ~10 m above the channel bed and
extends ~75 m up the tributary. The date on Fox's grave
indicates that this site has not been inundated by a similarly large flood in
~160 years.

Figure
9 Dr. Soren
Blau (
Acknowledgements: Dr. Soren Blau (
Published
Papers
Bourke, M.C.
(1997) The age of two human occupation sites in the
Bourke, M.C.,
(1998) Channel Adjustment to Extreme Events in
Bourke, M.C. and
Pickup, G., (1999) Fluvial form variability in arid
Pickup,
G., Marks, A., and Bourke, M. (2002). Paleoflood Reconstruction on Floodplains Using Geophysical
Survey Data And Hydraulic Modeling. In Ancient Floods Modern Hazards:
Principles and applications
of paleoflood hydrology. (P. K. House, R. H. Webb, V. R. Baker, and D. R. Levish, Eds.), pp. 47-60. Water Science
and Application. American Geophysical Union,
Bourke, M.C., (2004)
Scabland, channeled scabland. In: A. Goudie (Editor),
Encyclopedia of Geomorphology. Routledge,
Thesis
Bourke, M.C., 1999. Fluvial geomorphology and paleofloods in
arid central
Conference
presentations
Bourke,
M. C. (1994). Geomorphic effects of Holocene paleofloods in central
Bourke,
M. C. (1995). Complex landform assemblages of the
Bourke,
M.C. (1995) Geomorphic Effects of Holocene Super Floods on the Todd River,
Semi-Arid Central Australia, in Proceedings of the XIV INQUA Congress,
Berlin.
Bourke,
M. C. (1997). The geomorphic effects and chronology of
extreme floods in central
Bourke,
M. C. (1997). Quaternary floods in
Bourke, M. C., Spooner, N. A., and
Chappell, J. (1999).
Late Pleistocene flood records from central
Bourke, M. C., Spooner, N. A., and
Chappell, J. (1999). Paleoflood record beyond the gorge in central
Bourke,
M. C. (2000). Paleoflood records in unconfined channels in
Bourke,
M.C. and Zimbelman, J.R., (2000) Australian
paleoflood systems: An analogue for Martian channel systems, XXXI Lunar and Planetary Science Conference
Bourke, M.C. and Zimbelman,
J.R., (2001) The Australian paleoflood model for unconfined fluvial deposition
on Mars, XXXII Lunar and Planetary
Science Conference.