GEOL100 Chapter 16
Discharge =
(width) x (depth) x (velocity)
Characteristics of a braided stream
- Abundant sediments - Steep gradient - Variable flow
Which parameters increase as they go down from headwaters to the delta?
- Channel size - Discharge rate - Sediment load
Which factors affect stream profile?
- Climate - Rock type - Tectonics - Sea level
match the condition on the left with the effect on the river of drainage system on the right:
- Dam: Changes the base level because of sediment buildup - Tectonism: Can increase the slope and supply of coarse sediments - Runoff: Increases flow, causing flooding - Geology: Streams erode soft rocks more easily than hard rocks - Vegetation: Plants stabilize stream bank and protect against erosion
Match the type of sediment load to its description:
- Dissolved: chemically soluble ions - Suspended: Clay and silt carried above riverbed - Bed: materials carried on the bottom of the river
What features characterize low gradient rivers?
- Floodplains - Meanders - Point-bars - Single channels - Stream terraces
Which conditions have an effect on river flow system?
- Geology - Tectonism - Human engineering - Runoff - Climate - Vegetation
Factors that control the deposition of a delta are:
- Ice in streams and the sea - Vegetation - Wave erosion - Discharge - Sediment load
How does tectonism affect drainage?
- Increases slope - Increases supply of broad sediment - Increased precipitation flowing into drainage - Creates a rain shadow for the other side
Which of the following describes the great flooding in the Colorado river?
- It was measured by geomorphologists - It occurred before any settlement - Had an estimated discharge of 8500m^3/s
What conditions caused the Mississippi river flood of 1993?
- Severe precipitation caused by warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico and Cold dry Arctic air meeting. - Already saturated grounds
3 factors that influence drainage basin response to rainfall are:
- Slope - Shape - Size
Ranks stages of terrace formation in order:
1. Deposition of sediment occurs on the floodplain. 2. A drop in the base level of the river results in downcutting through deposits. 3. Further downcutting occurs, and the river abandons the previously formed floodplain. 4. The oldest floodplain becomes isolated as the river downcuts, leaving a terrace.
Order the sequence of layers as delta build further out:
1. Horizontal beds 2. Cross bedded sediments 3. Marine clays
How is an entrenched meander created?
1. River flows across floodplain 2. Tectonic activity causes uplift 3. Further incision caused by flow
Rank the seasons from the lowest discharge of water to the highest for a river located in the Upper Midwest of the U.S. (Place the season with the lowest discharge on top.)
1. Winter 2. Fall 3. Summer 4. Spring
What is a 100-year flood?
A flood with a 1% chance of occurring a year
What is a bedrock stream?
A mountainous stream flowing through carved bedrock channel
An erosional base level of a river can be _____ .
An ocean, a lake or a closed land basin
Antecedent vs superposed
Antecedent: Incises its surrounding geology Superposed: is confined by its surrounding environment
What is evidence that the Mississippi river moved over the last 7000 years?
At least six abandoned deposit marks where deltas were created.
_____ are created as flowing water collects in natural cracks and capture additional runoff.
Channels
What type of sediment is most common in floodplains?
Clay and Silt
Human-caused floods are created by which events?
Dam failure and urbanization
Which graph has a concave up shape?
Elevation profile???
Problems associated with channelizing a stream and countering its sinuosity?
Flooding, increased erosion and reduced deposition downstream
What is a dendritic flow pattern?
It is generally tree-like
What are the two large reservoirs created by damming in the Colorado river?
Lake Powell and Lake Mead
Features that occur along the Colorado river include:
Lakes, Geological structures, Dams, Lava flows
What caused the gradient of the lower portion of the Mississippi river to flatten?
Rise in sea levels
What are distributaries?
Small, shifting channels that distribute sediments throughout the surface of a delta away from the main river
How do mountainous streams obtain their sediment?
Soil/sediment slides down drainage area, tributaries bring sediments to drainage area
Wtf are "eddies"?
Swirls within a current caused by increased velocity and turbulence.
What is stream abrasion?
The process of grains chipping, scraping and sandblasting the streambed as they moved downstream.
What is an alluvial fan?
When a steep drainage enters a broad valley and sediments are deposited
Where and when does a graded stream occur?
When there is stability in conditions such as climate.
An area that a stream naturally drains is called a drainage _____ .
basin
Flat bottomed valleys between mountains is where _____ rivers can be found.
braided
Deposition occurs when water velocity _____ .
decreases
Potholes are formed when water flows in small _____ in the rock.
depressions
Outside of meander, velocity is _____ while on the inside it is _____ .
faster, slower
A flood that is characterized by high discharge over a short time frame is called a _____ .
flash flood
Any drainage basin can erode upward in a process called _____ . This can lead to _____ , the natural diversion of water from one stream into another
head-ward erosion, stream capture
Origin of a river is the _____ , and the end is called the _____ .
headwaters, mouth
Channel beds erode faster than channel sides in _____ streams.
higher velocity, turbulence and gradient
The _____ the stream velocity, the _____ it's capacity to carry sediment.
higher, larger
The upper portion of the Mississippi river _____ .
is young and was created by glacial meltwater
Flooding can be prevented by constructing _____ .
levees
A(n) _____ stream or river is one that flows year-round, whereas a(n) _____ stream does not flow the entire year.
perennial, intermittent
A sandbar deposited along the inside of a stream meander due to lower velocity is called the _____ .
point-bar
Two main driving forces behind a stream are _____ .
precipitation and gravity
Nickpoints can form a _____ .
rapid or waterfall
The type of sediment transport that involves a series of leaps or bounces off the bottom of a steamed is known as _____ .
saltation
A river can not erode below _____ .
sea-level
The amount that a channel curves for a given length is its _____ .
sinuosity
River _____ are relatively flat benches perched above rivers/streams and step upward.
terraces