River Systems Runoff - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 34
About This Presentation
Title:

River Systems Runoff

Description:

– PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:103
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 35
Provided by: EricPe3
Category:
Tags: river | runoff | systems

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: River Systems Runoff


1
River Systems - Runoff
2
Hydrologic Cycle
  • Precipitation 4.2 trillion gallons per day
  • 66 is lost as evapotranspiration
  • 31 is runoff
  • 3 infiltrates into the subsurface

3
Running Water
  • Integral part of sculpting the Earths surface
  • MOST IMPORTANT AGENT OF EROSION
  • Indirectly results in the formation of
    sedimentary rocks

4
Stream Formation
  • Sheetflow or Sheetwash overland flow of water
  • Repeated precipitation events cause a
    preferential channel to form downcutting
  • Tributaries form the main channel continues to
    grow up slope headward erosion

5
Stream Terminology
  • Stream System main stream plus tributaries
  • Drainage Basin area drained by main stream and
    tributaries
  • Drainage Divide area of higher elevation that
    divides drainage basins
  • Function of size/scale

For Example Kickapoo Creek
?Sangamon River
?Illinois River
? Mississippi River
6
Stream Subsystems
  • Collecting System
  • Tributaries is head water region
  • Funnel water and sediment to main channel
  • Primarily erosion and transport
  • Transporting System
  • Main tributary
  • Main process is the movement of the sediment and
    water
  • Erosion, transport, and deposition all occur
  • Dispersing System
  • Distributaries at mouth region
  • Primarily deposition of the sediment
  • Coarse sediment along the confluence
  • Fine particles carried further in to body of
    water

7
Permanent vs. Ephemeral Streams
  • Permanent Stream
  • Water flows year-round in the stream
  • Bed of the stream is below the groundwater table
  • Water is from both surface runoff and groundwater
    discharge
  • Ephemeral Stream
  • Water flows only after precipitation events or
    spring thaws (seasonal)
  • Bed of stream is above the groundwater table
  • Water is only from surface runoff

8
Drainage Patterns
  • Function of the underlying geology, the
    topography of the area, the history of the
    stream

9
Streamflow Dynamics
  • Examine the physical and hydraulic properties of
    the stream
  • Discharge
  • Velocity
  • Gradient
  • Channel Properties
  • Wetted Perimeter
  • Shape
  • Size
  • Roughness
  • Sediment Load

10
Discharge (Q)
  • Volume of water passing a given point over a
    specified length of time (length3/time),
    generally given in ft3/s or m3/s
  • Calculated by
  • Where A is the cross-sectional area (length2) v
    is the velocity of the water (length/time)

11
Velocity
  • The speed of the water at a given point along a
    stream
  • Directly related to a streams ability to erode
    and transport material
  • High velocity water can carry heavier sediment
  • Is a function of
  • Gradient
  • Channel Properties
  • Wetted Perimeter
  • Shape
  • Size
  • Roughness

12
Stream Gradient
  • Slope of steepness of the stream channel
  • Vertical drop (relief) of a stream over a fixed
    distance
  • Controls the potential energy of the water
  • Steeper the gradient the higher the velocity,
    the lower the gradient the lower the velocity
  • Meanders decrease the gradient by increasing the
    horizontal distance of the stream

13
Wetted Perimeter
  • The area in which water touches the channel walls
  • Channel shape and size controls the wetted
    perimeter
  • Most efficient streams have small wetted
    perimeters
  • Roughness of the channel controls the frictional
    resistance to water movement
  • A smooth channel decreases frictional force
  • A rough channel increases frictional force

14
Channel Shape and Velocity
15
Stream Morphology
  • Streams increase in length by headward erosion
    erosion occurring at the beginning of the stream
  • Streams become wider through lateral erosion
    mass wasting of the stream banks
  • Streams become deeper through downward erosion of
    the channel by abrasion of the sand and gravel

16
Stream Piracy
  • Continual headward erosion of one stream causes
    the intersection of two streams, thus diverting
    the headwater from one stream to another.

17
Erosion
  • Removal and transport of rock, sediment, soil
  • Running water is the major cause of erosion
  • Source of Materials in a stream
  • Mass Wasting
  • Lateral erosion of banks
  • Downward erosion of stream channel
  • Headward erosion
  • Sheetflow
  • Chemical Weathering

18
Stream Dynamics Sediment Load
  • Bed Load
  • Suspended Load
  • Dissolved Load

19
Sediment Load Bed Load
  • Particles to large to be lifted into suspension
  • Sediment moves along stream bed
  • Particles move by sliding, rolling, or saltating
    (short leaps)
  • Accounts for 10 to 25 of sediment load
  • Agent of downward erosion

20
Sediment Load Suspended Load
  • Light sediment lifted above stream bed by current
  • Mostly silts and clays
  • Accounts for most of stream load (? 60)

21
Sediment Load Dissolved Load
  • Chemical ions produced from chemical weathering
    of minerals
  • Ca2, Cl-, Mg2, SO42-, Na, K, HCO3-, etc.
  • Acquired from groundwater, sheetflow, or

    dissolving rock along a streams
    course.
  • Generally ? 10, but can be up to 50 of
    sediment load.

22
Effects of Transport on Particles
  • Rounding
  • caused by abrasion
  • Increases with distance particle is transported
  • Sorting
  • Varies with the competence of the stream
  • As competence decreases large particles are
    deposited

23
Controls of Sediment Load
  • Capacity
  • The amount (weight) of sediment a stream can
    carry
  • It is a function of discharge (velocity)
  • Velocity ? (proportional to) Capacity 3 to 4
  • Example, if velocity doubles (2) capacity
    increases between 8 (23) to 16 (24) times
  • Competence
  • The maximum particle size a stream can transport
  • Function of velocity and fluid density
  • Velocity ? (proportional to) Competence2
  • Example, if velocity doubles (2) competence
    increases 4 (22) times
  • As stream density increases with more suspended
    and dissolved sediment, competence increases

24
Velocitys role in Erosion
  • Threshold Velocity minimum velocity required to
    move grains of a certain size

25
(No Transcript)
26
QUIZ
  • What effect does urbanization have on streams?
  • Increase in discharge
  • Increases flooding intensity and frequency
  • Increases erosive ability of the stream
  • All of the Above
  • None of the Above

27
Urbanization Effects
  • Decrease infiltration Increases runoff
  • Produces Higher Peak Discharge
  • Produces shorter lag time
  • Produces more floods
  • Higher discharge increased ability to erode

28
Deposition of Material
  • Occurs when streams lose velocity (competence
    decreases)
  • Velocity decreases due to
  • Lower gradients
  • Flow into still or slow moving waters
    (reservoirs, lakes, etc.)
  • Changes in channel shape (widening or narrowing)

29
Stream Equilibrium
  • Stream want to be at a low energy state
  • When the gradient is high (high energy) erosion
    will occur
  • When the gradient is low (low energy) deposition
    will occur
  • Graded Stream stream gradient is in balance
    (equilibrium) with the volume of water available,
    thus neither erosion nor deposition occur along
    the stream profile

30
Longitudinal Profile
  • Cross-sectional image showing the variation in a
    streams elevation along its length

31
Base Level
  • The downward limit of stream erosion lowest
    elevation to which a stream can erode its channel
  • Ultimate Base Level sea level
  • Local Base Level lakes, resistant layers of
    rock, reservoirs, etc.

32
(No Transcript)
33
Effects of Changes in Base Level
  • Changes in base level change the energy of the
    system, which changes the velocity of the water.
  • What would happen if base level was increased,
    say with a dam?

34
Because of the reservoir velocity of the water
decreases. Thus competence and capacity decrease
and sediment load is deposited in the
reservoir. Water leaving the reservoir is
starved for sediment erosion occurs below the
dam.
35
Processes of Stream Deposition
Processes of Stream Deposition
  • Floodplains
  • Natural Levees
  • Meanders - Point Bars Cut Banks
  • Backswamps
  • Braided Streams

36
Flood Plain
  • Flat valley floor created by the side-to-side
    cutting of a stream
  • Stream generally confined to channel, except when
    discharge exceeds the volume of the channel

What happens to the competence of the stream when
it floods?
37
Natural Levee
  • During floods the wetted-perimeter increases, and
    the water moving over the floodplain slows down
    due to frictional forces
  • Competence decreases and sediment is deposited
    along the edge of the channel creating natural
    levees
  • Coarse sediment is deposited first

38
Meanders - Cut Banks Point Bars
  • Meander curve in a stream designed to decrease
    the gradient and increase the volume of water a
    stream can carry
  • Develop within the flood plain
  • Cut Bank outside edge of a meander where
    erosion (cutting) occurs, area of high velocity
  • Point Bar inside edge of meander where
    deposition occurs, area of low velocity

39
Meander Development
  • Meander loops migrate laterally and downstream
  • As meanders migrate and streams continues to
    erode and deposit sediment, a meander can be
    cutoff creating an oxbow lake.
  • What would happen to the streams gradient?

40
(No Transcript)
41
(No Transcript)
42
Backswamp
  • As a consequence of natural levees, the
    floodplain may be lower than the stream
  • Areas are poorly drained because water does not
    flow uphill
  • Creates marshes and swamps

43
Braided Streams
  • Stream pattern developed in response to a streams
    lose of competence.
  • Generally found in areas draining mountainous
    areas, streams draining actively glaciated areas,
    and semi-arid regions where the volume of water
    is seasonal
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com