Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami

River deltas are strongly affected by demographic growth and by the intensificationof land use. The migration of deltaic coastlines is often rapid, threatening urban set-tlements, coastal farming, and coastal biotopes. Some deltas benefit from centuriesof monitoring, such that the evolution of their...

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Main Authors: Chapkanski, Stoil, Brocard, Gilles, Lavigne, Franck, Tricot, Camille, Meilianda, Ella, Ismail, Nazli, Majewski, Jedrzej, Goiran, Jean-Philippe, Alfian, Dedy, Daly, Patrick, Horton, Benjamin Peter, Switzer, Adam, Degroot, Veronique, Steuer, Annika, Siemon, Bernhard, Cavero, Julien, Virmoux, Clement, Darusman, Darusman
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174622
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1746222024-04-18T01:38:17Z Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami Chapkanski, Stoil Brocard, Gilles Lavigne, Franck Tricot, Camille Meilianda, Ella Ismail, Nazli Majewski, Jedrzej Goiran, Jean-Philippe Alfian, Dedy Daly, Patrick Horton, Benjamin Peter Switzer, Adam Degroot, Veronique Steuer, Annika Siemon, Bernhard Cavero, Julien Virmoux, Clement Darusman, Darusman Asian School of the Environment Earth Observatory of Singapore Earth and Environmental Sciences Aceh delta Fluvial-coastal interplay GIS Historical maps Landform changes Sumatra Tsunami River deltas are strongly affected by demographic growth and by the intensificationof land use. The migration of deltaic coastlines is often rapid, threatening urban set-tlements, coastal farming, and coastal biotopes. Some deltas benefit from centuriesof monitoring, such that the evolution of their coastline is well documented. For mostdeltas, however, such long records do not exist. The study of their geomorphologicalevolution can benefit from overlapping maps drafted over time, combined with aerialphotographs and satellite images, to track the evolution of fluvial and coastal land-forms. Both fluvial and coastal landforms are sensitive to variations in water and sed-iment supply, such that covariations in the evolution of these landforms, or the lackthereof, provide clues on the contribution of water and sediment supply to delta evo-lution. We document the evolution of river channels and coastlines in the delta ofthe Aceh River in northwest Sumatra, by overlying maps, ortho-rectified aerial photo-graphs, and satellite images covering the past 130 years. We assess the accuracy ofthe overlays, and then use multivariate statistics to analyze the co-evolution of fluvialand coastal landforms. We propose that a progressive decrease in sediment supplyspurred river channel lengthening and narrowing, landward migration of the shore-line, and narrowing of beach ridges. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami generated aninstantaneous retreat of the coastline that amounts to 53% of the coastal retreatfrom 1884 to 2019CE. Post-tsunami evolution is marked by an irreversible accelera-tion of previous trends. Beach ridges located up-drift of rivers and tidal channel mou-ths are more sensitive to long-term landward retreat and tsunamigenic erosion. Ministry of Education (MOE) This study was funded by the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, through a Partenariat Hubert Curien–Nusantara grant, by the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, through an International Mobility Grant awarded to S. Chapkanski, by the Institut Universitaire de France (IUF) attributed to F. Lavigne and by the Laboratory of Physical Geography (LGP), UMR 8591. BPH, PD, AS, and JM are supported by the Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund MOE2019-T3-1-004, the National Research Foundation Singapore, and the Singapore Ministry of Education, under the Research Centers of Excellence initiative. Their contribution to this paper comprises Earth Observatory of Singapore contribution number 431. 2024-04-18T01:38:17Z 2024-04-18T01:38:17Z 2022 Journal Article Chapkanski, S., Brocard, G., Lavigne, F., Tricot, C., Meilianda, E., Ismail, N., Majewski, J., Goiran, J., Alfian, D., Daly, P., Horton, B. P., Switzer, A., Degroot, V., Steuer, A., Siemon, B., Cavero, J., Virmoux, C. & Darusman, D. (2022). Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami. Earth Surface Processes and Landforms, 47(5), 1127-1146. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/esp.5292 0197-9337 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174622 10.1002/esp.5292 5 47 1127 1146 en MOE2019-T3-1-004 UMR 8591 Earth Surface Processes and Landforms © 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Earth and Environmental Sciences
Aceh delta
Fluvial-coastal interplay
GIS
Historical maps
Landform changes
Sumatra
Tsunami
spellingShingle Earth and Environmental Sciences
Aceh delta
Fluvial-coastal interplay
GIS
Historical maps
Landform changes
Sumatra
Tsunami
Chapkanski, Stoil
Brocard, Gilles
Lavigne, Franck
Tricot, Camille
Meilianda, Ella
Ismail, Nazli
Majewski, Jedrzej
Goiran, Jean-Philippe
Alfian, Dedy
Daly, Patrick
Horton, Benjamin Peter
Switzer, Adam
Degroot, Veronique
Steuer, Annika
Siemon, Bernhard
Cavero, Julien
Virmoux, Clement
Darusman, Darusman
Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
description River deltas are strongly affected by demographic growth and by the intensificationof land use. The migration of deltaic coastlines is often rapid, threatening urban set-tlements, coastal farming, and coastal biotopes. Some deltas benefit from centuriesof monitoring, such that the evolution of their coastline is well documented. For mostdeltas, however, such long records do not exist. The study of their geomorphologicalevolution can benefit from overlapping maps drafted over time, combined with aerialphotographs and satellite images, to track the evolution of fluvial and coastal land-forms. Both fluvial and coastal landforms are sensitive to variations in water and sed-iment supply, such that covariations in the evolution of these landforms, or the lackthereof, provide clues on the contribution of water and sediment supply to delta evo-lution. We document the evolution of river channels and coastlines in the delta ofthe Aceh River in northwest Sumatra, by overlying maps, ortho-rectified aerial photo-graphs, and satellite images covering the past 130 years. We assess the accuracy ofthe overlays, and then use multivariate statistics to analyze the co-evolution of fluvialand coastal landforms. We propose that a progressive decrease in sediment supplyspurred river channel lengthening and narrowing, landward migration of the shore-line, and narrowing of beach ridges. The 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami generated aninstantaneous retreat of the coastline that amounts to 53% of the coastal retreatfrom 1884 to 2019CE. Post-tsunami evolution is marked by an irreversible accelera-tion of previous trends. Beach ridges located up-drift of rivers and tidal channel mou-ths are more sensitive to long-term landward retreat and tsunamigenic erosion.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Chapkanski, Stoil
Brocard, Gilles
Lavigne, Franck
Tricot, Camille
Meilianda, Ella
Ismail, Nazli
Majewski, Jedrzej
Goiran, Jean-Philippe
Alfian, Dedy
Daly, Patrick
Horton, Benjamin Peter
Switzer, Adam
Degroot, Veronique
Steuer, Annika
Siemon, Bernhard
Cavero, Julien
Virmoux, Clement
Darusman, Darusman
format Article
author Chapkanski, Stoil
Brocard, Gilles
Lavigne, Franck
Tricot, Camille
Meilianda, Ella
Ismail, Nazli
Majewski, Jedrzej
Goiran, Jean-Philippe
Alfian, Dedy
Daly, Patrick
Horton, Benjamin Peter
Switzer, Adam
Degroot, Veronique
Steuer, Annika
Siemon, Bernhard
Cavero, Julien
Virmoux, Clement
Darusman, Darusman
author_sort Chapkanski, Stoil
title Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
title_short Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
title_full Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
title_fullStr Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
title_full_unstemmed Fluvial and coastal landform changes in the Aceh River delta (northern Sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami
title_sort fluvial and coastal landform changes in the aceh river delta (northern sumatra) during the century leading to the 2004 indian ocean tsunami
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/174622
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