1.3. River Channel Processes and Landforms Flashcards

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1
Q

Load

A

The material transported by a river (includes rocks, stones, and other large particles.

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2
Q

Capacity

A

The maximum volume of load that a river can carry at a specific point in its course

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3
Q

Competence

A

The biggest sized particle that a river can carry at a specific point

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4
Q

Traction

A

The large particles, such as boulders, are rolled along the river bed

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5
Q

Saltation

A

Smaller particles, such as pebbles and gravel, bounce along the river bed

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6
Q

Suspension

A

Fine particles float in the water

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7
Q

Solution (transport)

A

Where particles, such as soluble rocks, are dissolved in the water

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8
Q

Velocity

A

Refers to the speed of the river. Velocities increase in river that are deeper and when rivers are in flood.

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9
Q

Discharge

A

This is the total volume of water flowing through a channel at any given point and is measured in cubic metres per second (cumecs).

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10
Q

Wetted perimeter

A

The length of bed and bank in contact with water.

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11
Q

Laminar flow

A

The horizontal movement of water, in sheets, parallel to the channel bed over a smooth surface, with no eddies or meanders.

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12
Q

Turbulent flow

A
  • Consists of a series of erratic eddies - vertical and horizontal in a downstream direction.
  • Friction in the water from beds and banks slows the water nearest and water in the centre overtakes, creating turbulence.
  • Water at the sides of the river begin to eddy towards the banks and water close to the bed of the river begins to eddy downwards.
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13
Q

Helicoildal flow

A
  • A continuous corkscrew motion of water as it flows along a river channel.
  • The thalweg follows a spiralling path as the river moves downstream.
  • The movement is constrained by the river channel - it moves from river bed to surface & bank to bank.
  • The vertical movement of thalweg produces pools and riffles and bank to bank forms regularly spaced meanders.
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14
Q

Floodplain

A

an area along a river that forms from sediments deposited when the river overflows its banks

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15
Q

Pools

A

The deep-water areas of a meander where erosion is the main process.

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16
Q

Riffles

A

shallow-water area found on the straighter sections of a meandering channel
- Riffles have more friction , causing the thalweg to be deflected to the pools.

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17
Q

Waterfalls

A

an area where water flows over a vertical drop or a series of steep drops in the course of a stream or river

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18
Q

Gorge

A

A deep narrow valley with very steep sides. It is currently occupied by a river or had a river in the past and is formed by a waterfall.

19
Q

Rapids

A

a fast-flowing and turbulent part of the course of a river.

20
Q

Abrasion

A

When a river uses its load of sediment to wear away its bed and banks( in uplands, pebbles get caught in hollows of the river bed - as they swirl, abrasion creates a pothole)

21
Q

Hydraulic Action

A

The force of water against the banks compressing air pockets into cracks, which expand and fracture the rock over time

22
Q

Attrition

A

Particles of sediment in the load of the river ( especially bedload) bump into each other and wear away each other. The river sediment will be smaller and more round.

23
Q

Solution (erosion)

A

Natural river water is often slightly acidic and it can dissolve rocks e.g. chalk and limestone

24
Q

Cavitation

A

Air bubbles trapped in the water get compressed into small spaces like cracks in the river’s banks. These bubbles eventually implode creating a small shockwave that weakens the rocks.

25
Q

Hjulstrom Graph

A

Shows what work a river will do (erosion, transportation, deposition) depending on its velocity and the size of material present.

26
Q

What scale does the Hjulstrom Graph use?

A

Double logarithmic scale

27
Q

Erosion velocity

A

The velocity required to entrain (pick up) particles from the stream’s bed and banks

28
Q

Settling velocity

A

The speed of river flow at which particles of specific size will be deposited

29
Q

Why do particles below 0.1mm have a higher erosion velocity than other particle sizes?

A
  • These particles are silt and clay, and they need greater velocities than large particles
  • This is because silt and clay have the ability to form cohesive bonds between particles in the form of flocculation
  • And because of it, greater velocities are required to break the bonds and move these particles
30
Q

Thalweg

A

An imaginary line where river flow is fastest

31
Q

Straight Channels

A
  • Rare in nature
  • Where they do occur, the channel is usually controlled by a straight zone of weakness in the underlying rock
  • Often man-made, such as channelization to reduce flooding or erosion problems. The idea is that a straight, smooth channel moves the water through faster, so less is available to spill out onto the floodplain
32
Q

Braided Channel

A
  • Consists of a network of small channels separated by small islands of deposited material called eyots
  • Occur in rivers with a large sediment load, unstable and easily eroded sediment, high slope, highly variable discharge

1) The water slows down in sections passing through flat, wide valleys with little downward slope allowing sediment to settle on the river bed.
2) The sediment starts to block the stream of water, causing lower velocity.
3) Until enough sediment settles on the bed, forming eyots that block the stream
4) The stream overflows its banks forming new channels. The stream is split into many streams causing the braided channel shape
5) The streams meet at a certain point only to split up again

33
Q

Formation of Waterfalls

A

1) Waterfalls form where a river flows over an area of hard rock( more resistant) followed by an area of soft rock(underneath/below)
2) Less resistant rock undercuts underneath - continues and undercuts hard rock above it- the river energy creates a plunge pool.
3) Less resistant rock beneath is eroded more rapidly by abrasion and hydraulic action. This creates a ledge which overhangs and collapses.

34
Q

Formation of Rapids

A

Form at areas of steepest gradient and river bed is rocky, resistant and irregular. Caused by a band/bands of hard rock in the river bed.

35
Q

Formation of Potholes

A

Holes carved by abrasion into rock bottom of the river channel with a whirlpool action of sediment caught in eddies.

36
Q

Formation of Meanders

A

1) Alternating pools (area of deep water) and riffles (shallower water) develop at equal spaces along the river due to the difference in river bed roughness leading to the thalweg flowing from side to side.
2) At pools, river water is more efficient so has greater erosive power and energy. Energy is lost as the river travels over a riffle as there’s friction
3) Pools and riffles now alter the speed of flow in different parts of the channel and cause the river to flow in a corkscrew pattern which spirals from bank to bank
5) The flow causes more erosion and deepening of the pools, forming river cliffs, and the eroded material is then deposited on the inside of the bend, forming slip-off slopes
6) The river continues to erode and deposit material. Eventually the curves the river become very close.
7) The river breaks through the thin barrier (during times of flooding) and the water no longer flows round the meander but straight along the new channel
8) Once the channel meander neck is breached an ox-bow lake forms

37
Q

Formation of Bluffs

A
  • River bluffs are formed by the erosion of the valleyside along the floodplain.
  • During flooding, the water erodes the base of the cliff / valley by abrasion and hydraulic action.
  • Also, when meanders migrate across the floodplain, the erosion of the outer bends undercuts the valley side to form river bluffs
38
Q

Formation of Floodplains

A

Forms when the river floods

1) River discharge in river exceeds bankfull discharge and water spills over land also carrying sediment
2) Friction reduces water velocity so the deposition of fine sediments like silt and clay occur on the flat land, creating a layer of alluvium
3) Heaviest sediment is deposited first on the river channel and builds up over time to form natural levees. Finer material is carried further

39
Q

Formation of Deltas

A

1) As a river approaches the sea, its speed reduces and deposition takes place
2) The heaviest material is dropped first. These form islands and the river begins to braid around these islands
3) Over time, more and more sediment layers are deposited and build up above sea level. The delta now extends out to sea
4) As a delta forms, sediment is carried across the flat top surface, then deposited over the edge in steeply sloping fore-set beds
5) Finer meterial is carried further but as flat bottom-set beds. While the delta grows, the flat top adds some more sediment forming top-set beds

40
Q

Bluff Lines

A

The outer limits of the floodplain. The bluff line is basically the edge of the valley floor.

41
Q

Point bar

A

a crescent-shaped accumulation of sand and gravel deposited on the inside of a meander

42
Q

Knick Points

A

Part of river profile where a sudden break/ irregularity occurs in the gradient. Waterfalls, dams, river rejuvenation and rapids cause Knick Points

43
Q

How to calculate river discharge

A

cross-sectional area x river velocity