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Sediment load determines the shape of rivers

Predrag Popović, Olivier Devauchelle, Anaïs Abramian, É. Lajeunesse

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

89, 127-146 (1978)], that rivers are restricted to exist close to the threshold of sediment motion (within about 20%). This limit is set by the fluid-sediment interaction and is independent of the water and sediment load carried by the river. Thus, as the total sediment discharge increases, the intensity of sediment flux (sediment discharge per unit width) in a river saturates, and the river can transport more sediment only by widening. In this large discharge regime, the cross-stream diffusion of momentum in the flow permits sediment transport. Conversely, in the weak transport regime, the transported sediment concentrates around the river center without significantly altering the river shape. If this theory holds for natural rivers, the aspect ratio of a river could become a proxy for sediment discharge-a quantity notoriously difficult to measure in the field.

Topics & Concepts

SedimentSediment transportHydrology (agriculture)Bed loadGeologySedimentary budgetDischargeFlux (metallurgy)FlumeEnvironmental scienceFlow (mathematics)GeomorphologyDrainage basinGeotechnical engineeringMechanicsPhysicsCartographyMaterials scienceGeographyMetallurgyHydrology and Sediment Transport ProcessesSoil erosion and sediment transportGeological formations and processes
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