Title: Chapter 6: Fluvial Landforms
1Chapter 6 Fluvial Landforms
- Drainage systems
- Origin of stream courses
- Drainage patterns
- Stream capture
2Hypsometric curves and the stabilization of
drainage basin form
3- Drainage systems
- stream ordering
- Hortonss hierarchy of
- streams
- lower order streams are
- shorter,
- steeper,
- drain smaller areas
- Drainage density
- D L/A
- measure of how well or poorly
- a basin is drained by streams
4th order drainage basin
4- Drainage systems
- stream ordering
- Drainage density
- D L/A
- measure of how well or poorly
- a basin is drained by streams
- higher for steeply sloping,
- low-permeability landscapes,
- which promote runoff, gullying,
- channeling.
- lower for low-relief, high
- permeabilty landscapes.
- -what about karst?
drainage texture -Note crenulated contours
4th order drainage basin
5- Drainage systems
- stream
- ordering
- whats
- outlined in
- red?
- whats
- outlined in
- yellow?
6- Origin of stream courses
- Virgin land surface (new landscapes)
- fresh volcanics
- newly glaciated
- emergent marine areas
- recently uplifted terranes
-
7- Origin of stream courses
- What determines the path taken by a stream on a
- virgin land surface (new landscapes)?
- slope of ground
- consequent streams
- random headward erosion
- homogeneous materials
- insequent streams
- selective headward erosion
- materials of varying resistance
- subsequent streams
-
8Pattern Origin Characteristics Geology
dendritic insequent random, acute-angle junctions homogeneous, horizontal beds
trellis subsequent parallel streams, high-angle junctions heterogeneous, tilted beds
rectangular / angular subsequent high-angle junctions, high-angle bends in tributaries jointed rocks
annular subsequent circular patterns heterogeneous, breached domes
radial consequent streams flowing in all directions from central high area volcanic or intrusive domes
9Yemen (very dry climate) http//www.cerritos.edu/e
arth-science/tutor/ Fluvial/drainage_patterns1a.ht
m
New Zealand, Wikepedia
Yangtze River, China NASA photo
10 11 12Diversion of a streams flow from its original
channel to the channel of a neighboring stream.
13- Two types
- abstraction faster rate of headward erosion on
one side of drainage - divide because of steeper gradient or less
resistant rocks. - intercession lateral movement of meander bend
intersects meander - bend of another stream.
14- Stream capture
- this is example of
- what type of stream
- capture?
-
- where might we see
- this in Appalachians?
15The Hadhramawt Plateau of South Yemen exhibits a
complex dendritic drainage pattern and excellent
examples of "stream piracy." Wadi Hadhramawt
opens into the sand-filled Ramlat Sabatayn in the
southwest corner of the Rub-al-Khali (The Empty
Quarter), yet drainage is toward the sea. The
southern coast of the Arabian Peninsula is at the
upper portion of the photograph. (S65-34658
Gemini IV.)
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18Landform Origin Processes/ Materials
floodplains constructional lateral and vertical accretion, channel and overbank deposits
pediments destructional lateral planation, sheet and rill wash, weathering, formation of graded surface
alluvial fans constructional deposition of coarse-grained sediments on land, fanhead trenching, mudflows
deltas constructional deposition in standing water, turbidity currents, birdfoot deltas
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21- introduced by Davis (1909), a foundational
concept in geomorphology for many years, formed
basis for interpreting landforms. - idealized sequence of landscape/landform
evolution. - begins with uplifted, virgin landscape.
- culminates with featureless plane eroded to
base level. - in between passes through stages, each with a
set of recognizable landforms.
22 23- The Cycle of Erosion
- sequence of forms 1) youth 2) maturity 3) old
age
24- Youthful stage
- initial drainage poorly developed
- consequent drainage initiated
- low drainage density
- swamps and lakes
- insequent drainage begins to develop
- headward erosion and vertical downcutting
dominant - steep stream gradients promote valley deepening
- narrow, V-shaped valleys
25- Mature stage
- reduction in basin relief
- streams become graded (adjust to load and
discharge) - stream gradients reduced, valley widening
accelerates - V-shaped valleys transition to flatter profiles
- flood plains develop
- valley sides and divides are smoothed and rounded
26- Old age penelplane
- gently sloping plane, just above
- base level
- very gradual transition between floodplain and
valley walls - real examples hard to findwhy?
- uplifted peneplains?erosional surfaces
- complicated by existence of broad, flat surfaces
not result of fluvial processes.
27Stage Landscape Processes
youthful steep hillsides, drainage divides predominant V-shaped valleys headward erosion, stream downcutting
mature rounded hills, valley walls predominant graded streams broad floodplains lateral erosion, streams adjust to discharge/load
old age peneplane, close to base level very low relief, sluggish stream flow, poor drainage
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29- former valley floors that lie above active
stream channels. - result from
- uplift
- change in base level
- change in load/discharge
- interrupts cycle of erosion
30- Types of cyclic stream terraces
- cut-in-bedrock terraces
- bedrock terraces
- covered by thin veneer of alluvium
- interpreted events
- erosion by graded stream
- uplift/change of base level
- downcutting
- fill terraces
- composed of alluvium, depositional in nature
- interpreted events
- filling of valley by aggradation of graded stream
- uplift/change of base level
- downcutting
31- Types of cyclic stream terraces (cont.)
- cut-in-fill terraces
- composed of alluvium, erosional in nature
- interpreted events
- valley cut into alluvium
- uplift/change in base level
- downcutting
- nested fill terraces
- composed of alluvium,
- multiple terraces, all depositional in nature
- successive cycles of aggradation and downcutting
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34- erosional surfaces on resistant materials
- do not represent periods of sustained erosion but
rather a resistant surface. - slope of surface conforms to bedding, not to
slope - of stream that formed it.
- may slope up-valley
- will not have concave-upward profile as a valley
- floor would.
-
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