Quantifying Channel Change with Historical Maps and High-Resolution Topographic Data: Lower Feather River, CA, 1909-1999
The resulting maps of contemporary topography and elevation change reveal evidence of several geomorphic processes. Natural levee development is strong at both sites on the 1909 maps—even where a channel diversion had occurred only a few years earlier—but much weaker on the 1999 maps. Net erosion predominated at both sites, but was partially negated at Shanghai Bend by filling of an abandoned channel. Erosion at both sites was concentrated in low-water channels and bars, while higher surfaces (terrace treads and channel fill) experienced net deposition. The combination of channel erosion and terrace deposition resulted in greater floodway relief and lower lateral connectivity between channels and overflow areas.
A series of aerial photographs from 1952 to 1999 was rectified and channel positions were digitized. Comparisons of lateral channel migration rates before and after 1952 at the two sites indicate that channel morphologic changes and sediment mobility were much greater in the first half of the 20th century than in the second half.