Rivers sourced in the Himalayan mountains support more than 10% of the global population, where the majority of these people live downstream of the mountain front on the alluvial Indo-Gangetic Plain. Many of these rivers however, are also the source of devastating floods. The tendency of these rivers to flood is directly related to their large-scale morphology. In general, rivers that drain the east Indo-Gangetic Plain have channels that are perched at a higher elevation relative to their floodplain, leading to more frequent channel avulsion and flooding. In contrast, those further west have channels that are incised into the floodplain and are historically less prone to flooding. Understanding the controls on these contrasting riv...
International audienceThe Tsangpo-Brahmaputra River drains the eastern part of the Himalayan range a...
The response of surface processes to climatic forcing is fundamental for understanding the impacts o...
Rivers are dynamic landscape features which are often altered by human activity, making it difficult...
The large Himalayan rivers of the Indo-Gangetic Plain support 10% of the world’s population. Most o...
Accurately quantifying sediment fluxes in large rivers draining tectonically active landscapes is co...
Upland rivers control the large-scale topographic form of mountain belts, allow coupling of climate ...
Accurately quantifying sediment fluxes in large rivers draining tectonically active landscapes is c...
The rivers from the Himalaya supply large quantities of particulate and dissolved materials to the o...
Erosion in the Himalaya is responsible for one of the greatest mass redistributions on Earth and has...
In the Indo–Gangetic plains (IGP), the inter–basinal area between the Ganga in east and the Indus in...
Chemical weathering of the earth crust supplies the essentiel elements for numerous biogeochemical c...
A flood study of the Himalayan rivers has been attempted on the basis of gauge/discharge data from 2...
Transient storage and erosion of valley-fills, or sediment buffering, is a fundamental but poorly qu...
International audienceThe Tsangpo-Brahmaputra River drains the eastern part of the Himalayan range a...
The response of surface processes to climatic forcing is fundamental for understanding the impacts o...
Rivers are dynamic landscape features which are often altered by human activity, making it difficult...
The large Himalayan rivers of the Indo-Gangetic Plain support 10% of the world’s population. Most o...
Accurately quantifying sediment fluxes in large rivers draining tectonically active landscapes is co...
Upland rivers control the large-scale topographic form of mountain belts, allow coupling of climate ...
Accurately quantifying sediment fluxes in large rivers draining tectonically active landscapes is c...
The rivers from the Himalaya supply large quantities of particulate and dissolved materials to the o...
Erosion in the Himalaya is responsible for one of the greatest mass redistributions on Earth and has...
In the Indo–Gangetic plains (IGP), the inter–basinal area between the Ganga in east and the Indus in...
Chemical weathering of the earth crust supplies the essentiel elements for numerous biogeochemical c...
A flood study of the Himalayan rivers has been attempted on the basis of gauge/discharge data from 2...
Transient storage and erosion of valley-fills, or sediment buffering, is a fundamental but poorly qu...
International audienceThe Tsangpo-Brahmaputra River drains the eastern part of the Himalayan range a...
The response of surface processes to climatic forcing is fundamental for understanding the impacts o...
Rivers are dynamic landscape features which are often altered by human activity, making it difficult...