Research Outputs

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
No Thumbnail Available
Publication

Runoff volume and sediment yield from an endorheic watershed generated by rare rainfall events in the Atacama Desert

2022, Dr. Caamaño-Avendaño, Diego, Alcayaga, Hernán, Soto-Alvarez, Marco, Laronne, Jonathan, Mao, Luca, Urrutia, Roberto

Surface runoff, channel activation and sediment transport processes in desert environments have been convincingly shown to strongly depend on the duration and intensity of local and convective rainfall events. Among these environments, the Atacama, considered the driest desert on Earth, is situated in a remote and rugged area, where documentation of historical and recent hydro-sedimentary processes is rare. We characterize the hydrological processes in an endorheic watershed of the Atacama's Altiplano Desert, where the occurrence of flash floods was evaluated on event-based signatures of water and sediment in a small ephemeral playa. Twelve pits were dug in the playa, with five identified event sediment couplets, each corresponding to computed flood volumes that gave rise to transport and depositional events occurring between 1978 and 2019. Detailed topography allowed reconstruction of a 3D terrain model, from which we estimated a 11.3 t/yr/km2 local historic sediment yield. The timing of the older identified events did not match local rainfall records, and proved to be uncorrelated with occurrences of El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). This suggests a high spatial patchiness of rainfall events in terms of depth and intensity, and implies that small playa records are not necessarily always helpful in reconstructing the regional climatic history of the recent past. The sediment concentration and volume of the reconstructed hypercontracted events are not well corrected with the magnitude of the rainfall event, suggesting the important role played by variable sediment availability and connectivity at basin scale. This spatiotemporal variability plays a major role in understanding the present and historic hydro-sedimentary processes in the Atacama's altiplano.

No Thumbnail Available
Publication

Detecting and quantifying hydromorphology changes in a chilean river after 50 years of dam operation

2019, Alcayaga, Hernán, Palma, Sebastian, Caamaño-Avendaño, Diego, Mao, Luca, Soto Alvarez, Marco

This study identifies and characterizes hydromorphological changes along the Rapel River downstream of the first large dam built in Chile (1968). A hydromorphological analysis is carried out to assess changes on the hydrological flow regime, bed sediments, and fluvial morphology along a 19 km river reach. Results classify current global hydrological quality as “Moderate” (according to the Indicator for Hydrological Alteration in RIverS, IAHRIS), however specific indicators within this classification scheme identified quality as “Poor”. The morphological quality decreased from “Very Good” to “Good” (assessed by the Morphological Quality Index, MQI). Changes in the planform were particularly intense during the post dam period when intensive lateral mobility occurred, with the corresponding loss of secondary river branches, and with generation of straighter and regular river sections with presence of an armor layer observed along the entire river reach. Between 1991 and 2015 channel stabilization with less lateral mobility was observed, which thought to be associated with the river new equilibrium trend. River width, sinuosity and braiding index changed at different rates along the studied river reach. Our investigation demonstrates that the Rapel River experienced changes differently than those described in the literature given its lower gradient and hydraulic interaction with the Pacific Ocean.