Journal of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Environment
Online ISSN : 2186-7135
Print ISSN : 1884-7579
ISSN-L : 1343-4446
Research Article
Modeling geomorphic changes in sedimentary rock areas:
A case study in the Boso Peninsula area, Central Japan
Ikuo HanataniMasahiro MunakataHideo KimuraTomoji Sanga
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

2011 Volume 18 Issue 1 Pages 3-24

Details
Abstract
  For the long-term safety of geological disposal of high-level radioactive wastes, evaluation of the radionuclide migration toward the human environment associated with groundwater flow is an issue of utmost importance. Therefore, we are carrying out a program for developing methods for assessing long-term groundwater flow in regional scales. As a part of the above program, we constructed models depicting the influences of geomorphological evolution on long-term groundwater flow. This was done by reconstructing the processes of river deepening with historical simulation of the profiles of four rivers in the Boso Peninsula. This area was selected because the sedimentary rocks are widely distributed with uncomplicated topography and geological structure which enabled the acquisition of a large amount of relevant geological information. The study resulted in the sum of erosion during the past 125,000 years which is the equivalent of one glacial to interglacial cycle.
  Consequently, the profiles of four rivers during the last glacial age to the present were successfully reconstructed using similar parameters. Also it was found that, in this area, the profiles were sculpted in accordance with the uplifting rates with very little influence of initial topography owing to the relatively soft and easily dissected characteristics of the geological units. However, detailed investigation revealed that the effects of geomorphological evolution differ between the rivers emptying into the inner bay and the rivers emptying into the open sea. In the case of the former two rivers, the river-bed elevation hardly changed during the 125,000 years and shows an extensive concave profile including the marine area. In the latter case, the elevation changed within the range of 20-30 m during the period and a convex profile appears in the marine area where the present water depth is over 30 m. Additionally the estimates of total amount of erosion during 125,000 years in the former group were 50-300 m which varied widely from downstream areas to the upper reaches of the rivers. On the other hand, they were 150-250 m ranging over the whole watershed in the latter group.
Content from these authors
© 2011 Division of Nuclear Fuel Cycle and Environment, Atomic Energy Society of Japan
Next article
feedback
Top