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Stream Erosion & Deposition

Stream Erosion & Deposition. Chapter 6 sections 1 and 2. What is a Stream?. A stream is a moving body of water that eventually connects to an ocean Note: Today we will be discussing large streams called rivers!.

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Stream Erosion & Deposition

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  1. Stream Erosion & Deposition Chapter 6 sections 1 and 2

  2. What is a Stream? • A stream is a moving body of water that eventually connects to an ocean Note: Today we will be discussing large streams called rivers!

  3. 1. Velocity – how fast or slow the river is moving; this determines the rivers ability to erode sediments River Characteristics Which river has a greater velocity?

  4. River Characteristics 2. Gradient – the slope or steepness of the river; the steeper the gradient, the more energy

  5. River Characteristics 3. Discharge – the amount of water moving by a certain point of the river in a set time The Amazon River in South America has greatest discharge 212,400 m3/s Mississippi River in USA has 7th greatest discharge at 17,300 m3/s

  6. 4. Stream Channel – the course that the water flows in a river River Characteristics

  7. Following a River from Source to Mouth • A river begins at the source/headwaters • This is usually where you find the steepest gradient • You may also find V-shaped valleys here

  8. Young Streams: -steep slope/gradient -high velocity -down cutting erosion http://pinker.wjh.harvard.edu/photos/american_west/pages/Yosemite%20Falls.htm

  9. Mature Streams • flood plain develops • lower slope/gradient • meanders (bends) form http://dynamic.ou.edu/notes/running_water/running_water.html

  10. OLD Streams -low slope/gradient -very wide channel and floodplain -abundant meanders NIAGARA RIVER

  11. Following a River from Source to Mouth • Alluvial fans – fan-shaped sediment deposit that forms when a high gradient stream leaves a narrow valley

  12. Following a River from Source to Mouth • As the river continues, you will also find many tributaries – this is where one stream empties into another As more tributaries add water to the main river, the amount of discharge increases

  13. Following a River from Source to Mouth • As the river moves downhill, it will erode its channel until it hits base level • Base level is the lowest point to which a river can erode its channel

  14. Following a River from Source to Mouth • As a river approaches base level, it can develop meanders – bends in the stream channel

  15. Following a River from Source to Mouth • Delta - a fan-shaped sediment deposit where a river empties into an ocean at mouth

  16. New Orleans: Built on Mississippi River Delta

  17. Note: Meanders can turn into Oxbow lakes…here’s how

  18. Sediment Transport in Rivers • Streams carry sediment in 3 ways: • In solution (dissolved load) • In suspension (suspended load) • Scooting or rolling along bottom (bed load)

  19. 1. Dissolved Load Sediments that are dissolved into river water

  20. 2. Suspended Load • Fine-grained sediment (like sand, silt, clay) that remains in the water during transportation • Usually what you see that makes a river look dirty • Most sediment carried by a stream is suspended • This amount increases dramatically during flood

  21. 3. Bed Load • Heavier, coarse grained sediments that travel along the bottom of a stream. • Causes the most stream erosion! • Sediment may not move frequently

  22. Higher velocities on outside of meanders causes erosion (cut bank) Lower velocities on inside of meanders causes deposition (point bar) Fig. 10.6 Meander Velocity

  23. A. Narrow and Deep Less resistance Faster flow B. Wide and Shallow More resistance Slower flow C. Rough Streambed More resistance Slower flow Channel Shape and Roughness

  24. Stream Velocity Controls: • How much and what grainsize of sediment is • Eroded and • Transported • Where and what grainsize size will be sediment

  25. Drainage Patterns A. Dendritic Geology controls stream patterns • Uniformly Erodible (e.g., flat-lying sedimentary rocks of the Midwest) • Conical Mountains (e.g., Volcanoes) • Fractured bedrock (shallow bedrock) • Resistant ridges of tilted sedimentary rocks (e.g., Valley and Ridge Province of Pennsylvania) B. Radial C. Rectangular D. Trellis

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