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Poyang and Dongting Lakes, Yangtze River: tributary lakes blocked by main-stem aggradation.

Chenge AnHongwei FangLi ZhangXinyue SuXudong FuHe Qing HuangGary ParkerMarwan A HassanNooreen A MeghaniAlison M AndersGuangqian Wang
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2022)
During its 6,300-km course from the Tibetan Plateau to the ocean, the Yangtze River is joined by two large lakes: Dongting Lake and Poyang Lake. We explain why these lakes exist. Deglaciation forced the ocean adjacent to the Yangtze mouth to rise ∼120 m. This forced a wave of rising water surface elevation and concomitant bed aggradation upstream. While aggradation attenuated upstream, the low bed slope of the Middle-Lower Yangtze River (∼2 × 10 -5 near Wuhan) made it susceptible to sea level rise. The main stem, sourced at 5,054 m above sea level, had a substantial sediment load to "fight" against water surface level rise by means of bed aggradation. The tributaries of the Middle-Lower Yangtze have reliefs of approximately hundreds of meters, and did not have enough sediment supply to fill the tributary accommodation space created by main-stem aggradation. We show that the resulting tributary blockage likely gave rise to the lakes. We justify this using field data and numerical modeling, and derive a dimensionless number capturing the critical rate of water surface rise for blockage versus nonblockage.
Keyphrases
  • water quality
  • heavy metals
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  • electronic health record
  • polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
  • risk assessment
  • big data