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STREAMS

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Title: Surface Water Author: Compaq Laptop Last modified by: anne.toth Created Date: 11/2/2005 2:15:25 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: STREAMS


1
STREAMS RIVERS
  • Chapter 6

2
REVIEW. The Water Cycle
3
6.1 Streams and Rivers
  • River Systems
  • (structure)
  • Tributary- a stream that
  • runs into another stream
  • or river
  • River system-
  • a river and all of its
  • tributaries

4
  • Drainage basin, or watershed- all the land
    that drains into the river either directly or
    through its tributaries
  • ex) Mississippi River system
  • Divide- high land that
  • separates one drainage
  • basin from another
  • Ex) Continental Divide in
  • the Rocky Mountains

5
Characteristics
  • Velocity- distance that water travels in a given
    amount of time
  • Related to the amount of energy that the water
    has
  • Erosion occurs more quickly
  • Other characteristics affect the velocity
  • Gradient, Discharge, and Channel Characteristics
  • Gradient- steepness of the slope of a stream or
    river
  • Steep at its source gradual at sea level

6
Characteristics continued
  • Discharge- the amount, or volume, of water that
    passes a certain point in a given amount of time
  • Not constant over length of a river
  • Increases downstream as tributaries add more
    water
  • Not constant year-round- increased
    precipitation/melting snow
  • Channel- the path through which the water flows
    in a stream or river
  • Shallow, winding stream with many boulders has
    contact with surface area that causes it to slow
    down by friction
  • Straight channel that is wide and deep has less
    surface area in contact with water, so velocity
    is greater
  • Velocity is greatest at the top center of the
    stream
  • When it curves, zone of max. speed shifts to the
    outer bank
  • SEE FIGURE 3 (p.160)

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8
Different types of Stream Channels
9
Base Level
  • Base Level lowest point to which a stream can
    erode its channel.
  • Base level is usually the level at which the
    mouth of a stream enters the ocean or the next
    body of water.
  • Temporary Base Level vs. Ultimate Base Level
  • Temporary lake Ultimate sea level
  • A stream in a broad,
  • flat-bottomed valley
  • that is near its base level
  • often develops many meanders.

10
6.2 Stream Erosion and Deposition
  • Erosion
  • Running water wears down Earths surface by
    breaking up bedrock and by removing eroded rock
    and soil materials
  • Breaks up materials by mechanical means
  • Abrasion mainly in time, creates rounded
    boulders, pebbles, and sand grains from the
    cutting tools

11
  • Deposition-
  • the process by which materials are deposited
  • Occurs because the river or stream no longer has
    enough energy to transport them

12
Stream Flow Erosion
  • There is more stream velocity in the middle/top
    of the stream
  • Erosion will be greater in the middle of the
    straight stream (increase depth)
  • Deposition will occur on the stream/river banks
    where the channel turns and the velocity of the
    waterway drops
  • SEE FIGURE 3 (p.160)

13
Erosion Deposition Features in an Old
Stream/River
14
Erosion cont
  • Potholes-
  • deep oval or circular basins formed when water
    in a river develops small whirlpools, and
    materials grind potholes in the bedrock

15
  • Plunge pool-
  • a basin that has been
  • worn away at the base
  • of a waterfall by the
  • action of falling water
  • Dunn River Falls
  • Chemical weathering
  • consists of dissolving soluble minerals
  • Calcite is dissolved, which may form pits and
    holes in the riverbed
  • Widens existing cracks and holes

16
Depositional Features
  • Delta- a fan-shaped deposit that forms when a
    river flows into a quiet or large body of water
  • River water comes to almost a standstill at a
    delta
  • Distributaries- branches formed by rivers flowing
    over its delta
  • Responsible for
  • deltas shape
  • Formation is
  • delicate balance
  • between deposition
  • and erosion

17
  • Alluvial fan- fan-shaped deposit
  • May form when a steep mountain stream meets dry,
    level land at the base of a mountain
  • Differs from a delta
  • Deposit is formed on land, not in water
  • Sediments are coarse sands and gravels rather
    than fine silt and clay
  • Surface is sloping,
  • not flat like that of a
  • delta

18
Transported Material
  • Load- the eroded rock and soil materials that are
    transported downstream by a river
  • Suspension- a state in which rock materials
    carried by a river are stirred up and kept from
    sinking by the turbulence of stream flow
  • Materials are heavier than water, but the
    turbulence keeps them stirred up
  • The faster a stream flows, the more turbulent and
    muddy it becomes
  • Bedload- sand, pebbles, and boulders that are
    moved along the bed of a stream and that are too
    heavy to be carried in suspension

19
Transporting Materials
  • Two measures are used to describe the ability of
    a stream to transport materials
  • Competence- a measure that describes the maximum
    size of the particles a stream can carry
  • Capacity- a measure of the total amount of
    sediment a stream can carry
  • Depend on the velocity and discharge
  • Vary along a stream and change throughout the
    year
  • High velocity High discharge large amount of
    sediment and larger sizes of sediment particles

20
Stream Deposition
  • River will deposit part of its load when either
    velocity or discharge decreases
  • Velocity may decrease if channel widens or river
    meets an obstruction (curving bank/rock outcrop)
  • Speed decreases at the inside of the curve and
    when the river empties into the sea- deposits the
    most material
  • Discharge and velocity increase during a flood,
    then decrease as flood waters subside

21
Meanders write your own notes!
  • Erosion occurs along the OUTSIDE of a meander
  • because the water is FASTER there (more
    velocity, more energy to erode)
  • Deposition occurs along INSIDE curves, (its
    slower water cannot transport sediment any
    longer)

22
Stream Valleys
  • Narrow valleys
  • narrow V-shaped valley shows
  • that the streams primary work
  • has been down cutting toward
  • base level
  • Rapids and waterfalls
  • Wide valleys
  • Downward erosion is less dominant
  • More energy is directed side to side
  • Floodplain- the flat, low-lying portion
  • of a stream valley subject to periodic flooding

23
Linville GorgeCarved out of the bedrock by the
river forming a river valley.
24
Floodplains
  • Streams that flow on floodplains move in meanders
  • Cutoffs- shorter channel segments
  • Oxbow lakes- abandoned bend of a river/stream

25
Oxbow Lake Formation
  • Meander forms (because the stream is close to
    base level)
  • Far side of curves erode faster, inching closer
    closer together.
  • Curves join, and water moves past the bypass loop
  • Deposition occurs at the ends of the loop
    (because velocity drops), cutting off the oxbow
    lake.

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27
Floods
  • Most caused by rapid spring snow melt or storms
    that bring heavy rains over a large region
  • Ex Mississippi River in 1993
  • Measures to control flooding
  • Artificial Levees- earthen mounds built on the
    banks of the river
  • Flood-control dam- store floodwater and then let
    it out slowly
  • Limits on floodplain development- minimizing the
    development on floodplains

28
Flood plains Levees
  • Developing in flood plains causes great economic
    loss.
  • What can we do to help this??
  • Build smaller levees farther apart
  • Less expensive to build
  • Improves habitat in the flood plain.

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