2005
DOI: 10.1002/esp.1170
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Blanket peat erosion and sediment yield in an upland reservoir catchment in the southern Pennines, UK

Abstract: This paper investigates temporal variations in fluxes of peat and other sediment in the catchment of March Haigh Reservoir, West Yorkshire. Long‐term estimates of sediment yield were derived from a study of reservoir sediments. Magnetic properties were used to correlate ten cores to a master profile dated using 210Pb and 137Cs. A 14C date suggests that most of the organic component of the sediment is allochthonous and derived from peat eroded from the catchment. Organic sediment yields suggest low catchment er… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…Reservoir sedimentation data are often used to determine sediment discharge in river basins (Tanaka, 1982;Le Roux and Roos, 1982;Duck and McManus, 1994;Hasegawa et al, 2005;Yeloff et al, 2005;Imaizumi and Sidle, 2007). In Japan, reservoir sedimentation monitoring has been conducted systematically at most flood-control dams since 1967.…”
Section: Reservoir Sedimentation Of the Miho Dammentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Reservoir sedimentation data are often used to determine sediment discharge in river basins (Tanaka, 1982;Le Roux and Roos, 1982;Duck and McManus, 1994;Hasegawa et al, 2005;Yeloff et al, 2005;Imaizumi and Sidle, 2007). In Japan, reservoir sedimentation monitoring has been conducted systematically at most flood-control dams since 1967.…”
Section: Reservoir Sedimentation Of the Miho Dammentioning
confidence: 98%
“…As a product of physical erosion it may be less reactive than DOC, and carbon accumulation rates in water bodies downstream of actively eroding peatlands indicate a high rate of sedimentary re-burial in some cases (e.g. Yeloff et al, 2005, and references therein). As POC tends to be mobilised during high flow events, a significant proportion is likely to be re-deposited on downstream floodplains; Walling et al (1998) gave estimates of 39-49% for sediment deposition to floodplains for two large UK river catchments (although this was not specifically for organic sediments).…”
Section: Contribution Of Peat Poc Fluxes To Co2 Emissionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evans and Lindsay 2010b) have resulted in significant reductions in the water storage volumes of upland reservoirs (e.g. Yeloff et al 2005) through sediment deposition. Peatlands in the UK also experience pressures from climate change through changing air temperature and seasonal water balance (Jenkins et al 2010).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%