Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2018

Presentation information

[JJ] Evening Poster

M (Multidisciplinary and Interdisciplinary) » M-GI General Geosciences, Information Geosciences & Simulations

[M-GI25] Environmental changes in mountainous area

Tue. May 22, 2018 5:15 PM - 6:30 PM Poster Hall (International Exhibition Hall7, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Keisuke Suzuki(Department of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Science, Shinshu University), Yoshihiko Kariya(Department of Environmental Geography, Senshu University), Chiyuki Narama(新潟大学理学部理学科, 共同), Akihiko SASAKI(Department of Geography and Environmental Studies, Kokushikan University)

[MGI25-P09] Species composition of woody plant fossils buried in lacustrine sediments within dammed lakes formed by the Dondokosawa rock avalanche in the Akaishi Mountains, central Japan

*Takashi Kimura1, Ryuji Yamada1, Yoshihiko Kariya2 (1.National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience, 2.Senshu University)

Keywords:Akaishi Mountains, rock avalanche, dammed lake, lacustrine sediment, woody plant fossil

The Dondokosawa rock avalanche (DRA) initiated at east-side slope of Mount Jizo, the Akaishi Mountains of southern Japan Alps, and traveled over 3.6 km in distance along the main stream of the Dondokosawa River. The displaced mass of the DRA completely blocked two parts, the outlet of right tributary of the Dondokosawa River and the channel of the Ohdanasawa River (upper part of the Komukawa River), forming two dammed lakes besides the debris (Kariya, 2012; Kimura et al., 2018). At these two sites, a lot of woody plant fossils buried in lacustrine sediments were found by the authors. Yamada et al. (2018) applied the dendrochronological analysis using tree-ring oxygen isotope ratios to disc fragment and increment core samples collected from two individuals, and estimated death year of one individual to be around AD885 and that of the another one to be AD888. These chronological constraints on the DRA strongly indicated that the DRA have occurred at the year of AD887 Ninna (Goki-Shichido) earthquake, which was one of the gigantic ocean-trench earthquakes documented along the Suruga and Nankai Troughs off central Japan, or at a couple of years later than this earthquake.

The finding of woody plant fossils also has a significance for understanding the paleoenvironment in mountainous regions. Because deposition zones, which store microfossils, plant macrofossils, ashfalls and sediments, are usually fragile in highly-erodible mountainous regions of Japan Alps, woody plant fossils with precise death years and living periods can be valuable proxies for paeoenvronmental reconstruction. In this study, we identified total 21 samples collected from woody plant fossils found at the outcrops of lacustrine sediments within the two dammed lakes formed by the DRA, and examined characteristics of the species composition in the Akaishi Mountains at around 9th century.

The sampling sites were named the lower dammed lake and floodplain deposits (LLD) and upper dammed lake and floodplain deposits (ULD), respectively. LLD is located at the confluence of the Dondokosawa and Ohdanasawa Rivers, and has a drainage area of 8.81 km2 with altitudes ranging from 1220 to 2760 m a.s.l. LLD mainly consists of sandy and silty sediments of over 4 m in thickness, and contains many large (φ25-40 cm) tree trunks. ULD is located at the outlet of right tributary of the Dondokosawa River, and has a drainage area of 1.17 km2 with altitudes ranging from 1470 to 2630 m a.s.l. ULD consists of alternated sand and silt layers of about 4-5 m in thickness, and contains middle-to-large (φ15-25 cm) tree trunks as well as small (< φ10 cm) logs and fragments.

Of the total 21 samples, the 7 samples in LLD are composed of major tree species in montane and/or subalpine zones such as Sawara cypress (Chamaecyparis pisifera), Hinoki cypress (Chamaecyparis obtusa), Birch tree (Betula sp.), Hemlock tree (Tsuga sp.) and Spruce tree (Picea sp.). The other 14 samples in ULD are composed not only of montane and subalpine tree species such as Fir tree (Abies sp.), Hemlock tree (Tsuga sp.) and Japanese larch (Larix kaempferi), but also shrub or small tree species such as Azalea tree (Rhododendron sp.) and Willow tree (Salix sp.).

According to the present vegetation around the Akaishi Mountains, two or more species are nominated for each of the above 6 genus: (1) Betula includes several common species in lowland and montane zones, such as B. platyphylla var. japonica and B. maximowicziana, and major subalpine species, B. ermanii, (2) Tsuga includes T. sieboldii and T. diversifolia, (3) Abies includes A. homolepis, A. veitchii and A. mariesii, (4) P. jezoensis var. hondoensis is the most likely candidate for Picea because of its abundance, while the possibility of rare species such as P. koyamai and P. maximowiczii, which are distributed only in narrow zones around Japan Alps, is still undeniable, (5) Rhododendron includes R. degronianum and R. brachycarpum, which are common understory species in subalpine forests, (6) Salix includes S. sachalinensis and S. serissaefolia, which are typical pioneer species in riparian zones.

References: Kariya (2012) Trans. Jpn. Geomorphol. Union 33, 297-313 [in Japanese with English abstract]; Kimura et al. (2018) J. Jpn. Landslide Soc. 55, 42-52 [in Japanese with English abstract]; Yamada et al. (2018) Quat. Geochr. 44, 47-54.