Constraints on water reservoir lifetimes from catchment-wide 10Be erosion rates – a case study from Western Turkey.

Heineke C, Hetzel R, Akal C, Christl M.

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

The functionality and retention capacity of water reservoirs is generally impaired by upstream erosion and reservoir sedimentation, making a reliable assessment of erosion indispensable to estimate reservoir lifetimes. Widely used river gauging methods may underestimate sediment yield, because they do not record rare, high-magnitude events and may underestimate bedload transport. Hence, reservoir lifetimes calculated from short-term erosion rates should be regarded as maximum values. We propose that erosion rates from cosmogenic 10Be, which commonly integrate over hundreds to thousands of years are useful to complement short-term sediment yield estimates and should be employed to estimate minimum reservoir lifetimes. Here, we present 10Be erosion rates for the drainage basins of six water reservoirs in Western Turkey, which are located in a tectonically active region with easily erodible bedrock. Our 10Be erosion rates for these catchments are high, ranging from ~170 to ~1040t/km2/yr. When linked to reservoir volumes, they yield minimum reservoir lifetimes between 25±5 and 1650±360 years until complete filling, with four reservoirs having minimum lifespans of ≤110 years. In a neighboring region with more resistant bedrock and less tectonic activity, we obtain much lower catchment-wide 10Be erosion rates of ~33 to ~95t/km2/yr, illustrating that differences in lithology and tectonic boundary conditions can cause substantial variations in erosion even at a spatial scale of only ~50km. In conclusion, we suggest that both short-term sediment yield estimates and 10Be erosion rates should be employed to predict the lifetimes of reservoirs.

Details about the publication

JournalWater Resources Research
Volume53
Page range9206-9224
StatusPublished
Release year2017
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1002/2017WR020594
Keywordswater reservoir; reservoir sedimentation; cosmogenic 10Be; erosion rates; Menderes Massif; Turkey

Authors from the University of Münster

Heineke, Caroline
Institute and Museum of Geology and Palaeontology
Hetzel, Ralf
Professur für Endogene Geologie und Strukturgeologie (Prof. Hetzel)