Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the...

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Page 1: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.
Page 2: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Important Fluvial Terms

Drainage basin/catchment/watershed:•defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has a drainage basin. •A drainage basin collects water, which is delivered to a larger basin, creating larger streams

Continental Divide: •The line separating subcontinental-scale drainage basinsWater and sediment usually terminate in oceans

Internal drainage basins are areas in which water does not terminate in an ocean. (leaves via evaporation or subsurface gravitational drainage

http://atlas.gc.ca/site/english/maps/freshwater/distribution/drainage

Page 3: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Drainage Basins

Red: selected drainage basins for firstorder streams(collection ofred areas shouldfill the yellow area but somestreams notrepresented)

Yellow:larger drainage basins for river

Page 4: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Drainage density is determined by dividing the total length of all streams by the area of the basin

For a given surface, a higher drainage density is generallyfound in a humid area than in a dry area

Drainage Pattern is the arrangement of channels in an area. Drainage pattern is determined by:

•Slope of the catchment•Rock resistance to weathering•Climate•Underlying bedrock•Subsurface hydrology

Page 5: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Drainage Patterns

1. DendriticTree-like pattern [Fig. 11-6 (a)]Efficient –branch length minimized

2. RectangularA faulted and jointed landscape directs streamsalong right angle turns [Fig. 11-6 (e)]

3. TrellisForms where resistance of bedrock varies or along a folded landscapeFolds create parallel large streams, capturing runoff from smaller streams and joining into larger rivers at right angles [Fig. 11-6 (b)]

Page 6: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

4. Radial DrainageStreams flow from central peak or dome

5. Annular DrainageOccurs in dome structures with concentric patterns of rock strata

6. Parallel drainage [Fig. 11-6 (e)]Steep slopes - similar to dendritic, but steep slopes cause branches to appear almost parallel to one another

7. Deranged DrainageIn areas with disrupted surface patterns there is often no clear drainage geometry(common in glaciated areas)

Page 7: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Flow velocity: A measure of how fast a stream moves downstream (v in m/s). It depends on thedischarge, slope, size and shape of the channel.

Discharge: The amount of water flowing througha cross section of a stream (Q in m3/s). Fluctuates seasonally and diurnally (eg. melting greatest in spring/summer and during the day) Q=wdv

Capacity: The amount of sediment that can be carried by a stream (m3/s or kg/s). Capacityincreases with discharge.

Competence: The maximum particle size that canbe carried by the stream (related to flow velocity)

Page 8: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Sedimentary load is the total amount of sediment carriedby a stream. Sedimentary load is carried by bedload, suspended load and washload.

Bedload: Coarse particles (eg. sand) which have high settling velocity. Sediments are transported near the streambed, kept loose by turbulence and particle interaction.

Suspended load: Particles are in the water column, sortedby weight (larger particles near the bottom). The higherthe discharge, the higher the suspended load.

Washload: Fine particles with low settling velocity, whichtravel at the same speed as the flow. Almost independent ofdischarge.

Page 9: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Solution load: The total amount of dissolved ions transported by a stream. Determined by nature of source material and the physical and chemical characteristics of the stream.

Page 10: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Sediment bulking: Sediment is added to a stream in excess of its capacity.

In normal, turbulent flow, the critical point of the dynamic equilibrium between erosion and deposition is exceeded with sediment addition, thus, deposition (aggradation) occurs.

Aggradation may lead to the development of a braidedstream.

Page 11: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Braided stream, S. AlaskaPhoto: M. Miller (U. Oregon)

Page 12: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Reynolds Number (R):R = inertial forces_____ = lv

internal frictional forces

where = fluid densityl = flow depthv = overall mean velocity = viscosity of the fluid

Flow Regimes: Understanding of different flow regimes helps us to understandresulting sediment bedforms and structures.

Laminar flow: Quasi-laminar flow occurs in slow moving(R<500) streams with smooth bottoms. Frictional

forces exceed inertial forces (500<R<2000)Turbulent flow: Higher flow velocity and bed roughness, with(R>2000) eddies. Friction with bed reduces v. Velocity

constant with depth except basal laminar layer.

Page 13: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

A. Laminar flow

B. Quasi-laminar flow

C. Turbulent flow

D. Obstruction in turbulent flow

Relative velocity profiles

Flow Regimes

Page 14: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

2. Froude Number (F):

F = inertial force = v gravitational force (gl)-2

The ratio between the average velocity of the entire liquid massand the rate of downflow wave migration (celerity).

F<1 Inertial forces are less than gravitational forces. Therefore,celerity of surface waves exceeds stream velocity (ie., waveforms faster than river, and break downstream)

F=1 Critical flow (no whitewater)

F>1 Main body of water moves faster than surface waves. Surface waves break upstream.

Page 15: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Turbulent flow

A. Subcritical (waves break downstream)

B. Critical (standing waves at water surface)

C. Supercritical (waves break upstream)

CELERITYFLOW VELOCITY

Page 16: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Quasi-laminar flow:Sand ripples with ripple cross-lamination form, unless the sandis very coarse.

Turbulent, subcritical flow:Sand dunes showing cross-beds in section form

Turbulent, critical flow:Horizontal beds with plane laminations and minute strings of particles aligned parallel to flow direction at surface

Turbulent, supercritical flow:Poorly-developed dunes or other massive beds form with steeper side facing upstream

Page 17: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

How can we tell which type of flow was occurring by looking ata cross section ? In the following slides, we will look at the sediment facies resulting from (a) meandering streams, (b) decelerating streams and (c) shallow streams with highly variablewater and sediment discharge.

Page 18: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Meandering streams

Streams take on a sinuous form where slope is shallow.Water flows faster around the bends. The varying currentcauses distinct erosional and depositional surfaces

1. Outer bend Erosional, supercritical flows- undercut bank

2. Middle-outer Deposition of coarse-grainedor parallel, laminated sand(critical flow)

3. Middle-inner Depositional, subcritical flowCross-bedded sand dunes

4. Inner bend Fine-grained, cross-laminatedsand ripples (point bars located here)

As the meander bend migrates, the lateral sedimentary facies stackvertically. In other words, as the bend increases, coarse-grainedmaterial becomes covered with progressively finer-grained sediment.

Page 19: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Meandering Stream

Page 20: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

As this stream meanders, the bend seen in cross-section A extends further to the left. As this occurs, there is a transition from erosional,supercritical flows to critical and subcritical flow, with the associated depositional features superimposed as in cross-section B.

*Note: Plane beds and antidunes are onlyformed when flows are charged to capacity.

Page 21: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Bar Formation

A. In high-competence flows in shallow streams with variable water and sediment discharge, coarse grained sediment formsupstream from finer-grained sediment (sheet bar).

Such bars are parallel to current with no flow separation bubble (B)

C. Finer-grained sediment tends to form transverse bars of variousshapes and do contain inclined depositional surfaces downstream (D)

Page 22: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Bar formation

Page 23: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Hydraulic conditionschange during floods, eroding bars to formScours

Coarser material is deposited during the highflow, with progressivelysmaller particles depositedthereafter

New bars form and finer sediment is again foundabove the gravel, resultingin cut and fills

Cut and fills

Page 24: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Oxbow lake

A lake that was formerly a channel of a meandering stream

Formed when a meandering stream erodes back upon itself, straightening the main channel. The old river channelis still filled with water until sedimentation fills it again

Page 25: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Oxbow Lake,Milk River, MT (just south of Canadian border)

Page 26: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Stream gradientA stream usually has a steeper slope upstream and a gentler slope downstream, resulting in an uneven, concaveshape

NickpointA nickpoint is the location at which an abrupt change instream gradient occurs

WaterfallAt a nickpoint, the water falls to softer, more easily erosive rock strata, leading to undercutting

Page 27: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Floodplains

Flat, low-lying areas near a river that are repeatedly flooded.Rivers overflow during high flow and deposit sediment upon the floodplain.

Rivers of a floodplain are generally embedded within the sediment of the floodplain itself.

Levees develop along the banks of rivers as a result of flooding. When a river floods, the velocity is reducedbeyond the bank, leading to sedimentation. The larger particles fall first, leading to the creation of a natural levee. The river may rise relative to the floodplain, leading to backswamp areas.

Page 28: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Terraces

Uplift may allow a stream to cut deeper into its ownfloodplain (rejuvenation), leading to alluvial terraces. Such terraces look like steps above the river (Fig. 11-19)

River DeltasThe velocity of a river rapidly decelerates as it reaches a large body of water. This leads to deposition, of progressively smaller particles (large ones first). A characteristic triangular shape forms (hence the term delta)

The river channels divide into smaller ones in all the sediment, leading to what appears to be a reversed dendritic drainage pattern (braided delta).

Page 29: Important Fluvial Terms Drainage basin/catchment/watershed: defined by the ridges that control the direction of precipitation drainage. Every stream has.

Nile River Delta