This general description of the morphology of the Amazon may vary in places. Although the Amazon flows on top of thick sedimentary layers along its central axis, it is still influenced by buried transverse structures (Figure 2.2). Four major structural arches (Iquitos, Jutai, Purús and Gurupa) and the Monte Alegro Intrusion, occur underneath the sedimentary layers and modify the river near their location. The Amazon crosses the structural highs on a straightened course. The water surface steepens slightly, the floodplain narrows, the river tends to hug the foot of the terraces, scroll bars are found only at channel margins, and channel migration becomes less common. Gravity measurements for the Lower Amazon area show a change in the direction of the river and its form with gravity anomalies (Nunn and Aires 1988), indicating that the Amazon crosses its floodplain only in specific places. Structure controls even the biggest river in the world.
Many examples of tectonic control are found In the Amazon and its tributaries. For example, Franzinelli and Igreja (2002) associated the alignment of the lower Negro River (which joins the Amazon at Manaus) with a NW-SE tectonic lineament. Sunken crustal blocks and depressions have been created by intersecting a set of blocks along a half graben that is inundated to the depth of 20 m across a 20 km reach of the river. The Negro carries very little sediment and this small amount is flushed through the fault-lined depression with accumulation of only little sand bodies along river borders. The banks of the Negro are in cohesive cliffs of lacustrine deposits, and bedrock is exposed in river channels because of a shortage of sediment for cover (Franzinelli and Igreja 2002). Straight reaches of the middle Amazon have been related to recent activities along a set of NW-SE and SW-NE fractures (Latrubesse and Franzinelli 2002). These fractures were originally described in 1952 by Sternberg and Russell from river and lake alignments (Mertes and Dunne 2007). Latrubesse and Franzineli (2002) also interpreted the confluences of the Amazon as tectonically controlled, coinciding with a wide V-shaped sunken block (Figure 4.6).
An impressive amount of sediment is deposited on the lowermost Amazonian floodplains, and in the floodplain lakes (Meade 2007). An average annual sediment discharge of 1240 (±130) million tonnes at Óbidos has been computed from a number of measurements by Dunne et al. (1998). The arrival of the turbid sediment in the sea is clearly seen in a satellite image (Figure 3.4). About half of the sediment that passes Óbidos has been estimated to settle on the sea bed of the Amazon mouth (Kuehl et al. 1986) but a considerable amount is carried by the North Brazil Current to the northwest along the coastline and transported longshore around the northern promontory of Cabo Norte to ultimately reach the outer coastline of the delta of the Orinoco. Such sediment has travelled about 1600 km after leaving the mouth of the Amazon (Meade 2007). It is an extraordinary travelogue.
Three factors interact through the late Cenozoic, and particularly the late Quaternary, to determine the form of the Amazon and its floodplain: basin tectonic setting, climate, and sea-level fluctuations (Mertes and Dunne 2007). These factors control erosion, sediment transport and deposition in the Amazon valley and determine the morphology of its channel and floodplain. The final product is a huge river, often nearly straight, influenced by geological structural features underneath, wider between such structural features with characteristic floodplain features, and a levee-bounded main lower channel that carries sediment to the sea, leaving lakes unfilled behind the embankments.
Figure 4.6 Structural control at the Amazon-Negro confluence. In Brazil the Amazon is known as the Solimoes.
Source: Adapted from Latrubesse and Franzinelli 2002.
4.4 The Ganga River
4.4.1 The Setting
Rising in the Himalaya, a convergent fold mountain range, the Ganga passes along a foredeep, joins with two other large rivers, the Brahmaputra and Meghna, and flows into the Bay of Bengal through the largest delta on Earth. The three rivers together drain over a million square kilometres, discharging the fourth highest water volume (970 × 10 km3) and the second highest annual suspended sediment load (about 1000 million tonnes) to the sea. Such figures are reached because the river drains a high tectonic mountain range with intense monsoon rain falling over the catchment area. Unlike the Amazon, the Ganga has a long history of anthropogenic utilisation of the water of its channel and the land of its basin. The two major diversions of the Ganga happen via the upper Ganga Canal at Haridwar and Lower Ganga Canal at Narora. Part of its water is diverted down the Hugli distributary channel at the Farakka Barrage. The falling quality of the river water, transferring more and more polluted material, is probably the biggest concern in river management.
The Bhagirathi, the main headwater of the Ganga, rises at 3800 m from the Gangotri Glacier. The river is known as the Ganga from Devprayag where it is joined by the Alaknanda. After another 300 km of river distance, the Ganga descends to 290 MSL at Haridwar. Following the steep descent, the river flows parallel to the mountains along the extensive low-gradient alluvial plains of the Himalayan foreland, a subsiding continental interior setting.
The Ganga turns east and flows along a wide alluvial plain built on the foreland by the main river and its tributaries (Figure 4.7). The river receives both water and sediment from the Himalayas to the north and the cratons of the Peninsular India to the south. All along its course, the river is joined from the north by a number of large Himalayan tributaries at intervals of hundreds of kilometres. The Ganga and these tributaries have built huge alluvial fans (megafans) at the Himalayan highland–lowland contact. Some of these megafans have been studied in detail, e.g. the Kosi (Box 4.1).
The tributaries from the south drain the old rocks of the northern edge of the Indian Peninsula, contributing a smaller amount of water and coarser sediment. Several of these tributary streams flow into the Yamuna, the biggest tributary of the Ganga, instead of directly joining the Ganga. The Yamuna is a Himalayan river and at its confluence with the Ganga at Allahabad, it contributes about 59% of a combined discharge of 130 × 10 m3 (Das Gupta 1984).
The Ganga turns south at the eastern margin of its large alluvial plain through a gap in the basaltic low hills of Rajmahal, a short distance above the apex of its delta. One of its two main distributaries (the Bhagirathi or Hugli) flows south within India, collecting drainage from the northeastern corner of the Indian Peninsula. The other major distributary, the Padma, carries most of the water into Bangladesh where it meets with the Brahmaputra and then the Meghna. These three rivers combine to build and maintain the large Ganga-Brahmaputra Delta.
Figure 4.7 The Ganga from satellite imagery.
Source: NASA Worldview application (https://worldview.earthdata.nasa.gov), part of the NASA EOSDIS.
4.4.2 Hydrology
The Ganga essentially is a rainfed seasonal river sustained by the summer rain of the Indian monsoon. The annual