Outburst Flooding of the Moraine-Dammed Zhuonai Lake on Tibetan Plateau: Causes and Impacts

2016 
The Kekexili region of the Tibetan Plateau has become warmer and wetter since the 1960s, resulting in a significant expansion of Zhuonai Lake (+0.46 km 2 /year, $p ) before an outburst flood event occurred on September 15, 2011, and mapped by the Chinese Huanjing (HJ)-A/B satellites with a two-day revisit ability and a 360-km orbit swath. The direct cause of the outburst was due to relatively heavy precipitation from May to September 2011, specifically the continuous rainfall from later August to middle September. Two nearby earthquakes that occurred two months before the outburst might have impacted the natural structure of the lakebed and moraine dam to accelerate the outburst. The outburst event of Zhuonai Lake caused large environmental impacts on the region: 1) the desertification of the exposed lakebed of Zhuonai Lake; 2) the significant expansion of the three downstream lakes Kusai, Haidingnuoer, and Salt Lakes that not only caused the grassland reduction and deteriorations but also the potential threat to the operations of the Qing-Tibet Railway and Highway; and 3) the calving relocation of Tibetan antelopes to the shore area of Kusai Lake due to the deep cutting riverbanks caused by the overflow of Zhuonai Lake. This study provides some scientific clues or alerts for local or central governments to pay some attention on this very issue so that possible future devastative disasters and environmental damages would be avoided or mitigated.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    15
    References
    18
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []