What remains today of pre-industrial Alpine rivers? Census of historical and current channel patterns in the Alps

25.10.2020

Type: Document Language: English Author: Severin Hohensinner, Gregory Egger, Susanne Muhar, Lise Vaudor, Hervé Piégay

To date, no survey on the diverse channel patterns existing prior to the major phase
of river regulation in the mid-19th–early 20th century has been elaborated at the
scale of the whole European Alps. The present paper fills this knowledge gap. The
historical channel forms of the 143 largest Alpine rivers with catchments larger than
500 km2 (total length 11,870 km) were reconstructed based on maps dating from the
1750s to 1900. In the early 19th century, one-third of the large Alpine rivers were multi-channel rivers. Single-bed channels oscillating between close valley sides were also frequent in the Alps (28%). Sinuous and even more so meandering channels were much rarer. Historical river patterns generally followed an upstream–downstream gradient according to slope condition, floodplain width and distance from the
sources. The local occurrence of certain channel patterns, however, primarily
reflected the tectonic/orographic conditions. Multi-channel reaches were widespread
within the whole Alpine area, alternating with confined and oscillating reaches. This
demonstrates that most areas were mainly transport-limited rather than supply lim-
ited. Sinuous and meandering reaches were more frequent in the north-eastern Alps
and were characterized by lower denudation rates and less sediment delivery.
Channel straightening caused the loss of about 510 km of river course length, equiva-
lent to 4.3% of the historical extent. Multi-channel stretches are currently a mere
15% of their historical length, and 45% of the larger Alpine rivers are intensively
channelized or have been transformed into reservoirs. Channelization measures dif-
fered from one country to another. Human pressures directly affected both local
channel geometry and the upstream controls (i.e., sediment supply). Accordingly, indi-
vidual multi-channel reaches also evolved into single-thread channels without any
local human interventions.

Keywords: Alpine rivers, channel patterns, historical GIS, historical state, river training

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