Title: Fluvial Geomorphology
1Fluvial Geomorphology
2Significance of fluvial processes
- water is ubiquitous landscape shaping agent
- rivers constitute important natural habitats
- river processes create significant natural
hazards
3mountain river, western Cascades, Oregon
4meander bends, Itkillik River, Alaska
5braided channels, Chitina River, Alaska
6Outline
- River mechanics
- How do rivers respond to change?
- Example from Vermont
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8River mechanics
Discharge amount of water carried by a river per
unit time
Discharge area x velocity area f(width,
depth) velocity f(slope, roughness)
Cross-section view
9River mechanics (continued)
Velocity varies across the channel cross-section
10River mechanics (continued)
Longitudinal view
Systematic changes in downstream direction -
slope, width, depth, velocity
11mountain river, western Cascades, Oregon
12meander bends, Itkillik River, Alaska
13River mechanics (continued)
Roughness changes systematically in the
downstream direction
14River mechanics (continued)
Form of the river changes characteristically
along the longitudinal profile hydraulic
geometry
15River mechanics (continued)
Sinuosity channel lengh (Lc) valley
length (Lv)
Lc
Lv
Plan view
16River mechanics (continued)
As slope decreases, river will tend to meander
laterally, creating a floodplain.
Floodplain
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18How do rivers respond to change?
19Equilibrium concept
Rivers seek to attain a form that allows them to
balance force provided by the flow with
resistance provided by sediment
Adapted from Lane, 1965
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21Channel adjustment
Excess water river degrades (deeper, narrower)
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23Channel adjustment
Excess sediment river agrades (shallower, wider)
24Rivers attempt to reach some equilibrium between
erosive power of running water and resistance
offered by bed, banks (sediment)
- How? By altering their geometry...
- width
- depth
- roughness
- slope
- sinuosity
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26Channel change in Vermont
From Kathleen Donna, Assessing Channel Change on
the Upper White River, Vermont University of
Vermont, M.A. Thesis, Dept of Geography, 2002
27Upper White River
White River watershed
Study area - Upper White River drainage basin
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29Table 1 Sources and characteristics of black
and white aerial photography
Characteristics of black and white aerial
photography
1975
1990
1 Refers to mean daily discharge recorded at USGS
Station 01144000 on the date that air photos
were taken.
30Mapped land cover
31Mapped channel features
32Assessing channel change
Reach 1
Reach 3
33Assessing channel change
Reach 4
Reach 6
34Land cover change over time
35 1939
120,000
1956
1975
1982
1990
2-gt5yr. 2-gt2yr.
1- gt10yr.
1- 10yr.
1-gt50yr.
36Channel change and restoration planning