Man made deltas

Male Conservation of Natural Resources Geologic Sediments Climate 15. Life on land 01 natural sciences Article Europe Rivers 13. Climate action Water Movements Humans 14. Life underwater 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI: 10.1038/srep01926 Publication Date: 2013-05-31T09:03:16Z
ABSTRACT
The review of geochronological and historical data documents that the largest southern European deltas formed almost synchronously during two short intervals of enhanced anthropic pressure on landscapes, respectively during the Roman Empire and the Little Ice Age. These growth phases, that occurred under contrasting climatic regimes, were both followed by generalized delta retreat, driven by two markedly different reasons: after the Romans, the fall of the population and new afforestation let soil erosion in river catchments return to natural background levels; since the industrial revolution, instead, flow regulation through river dams overkill a still increasing sediment production in catchment basins. In this second case, furthermore, the effect of a reduced sediment flux to the coasts is amplified by the sinking of modern deltas, due to land subsidence and sea level rise, that hampers delta outbuilding and increases the vulnerability of coastal zone to marine erosion and flooding.
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