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Confluences and Networks Outline Flow and sediment transport characteristics at river confluences Braid bar development Network characteristics and organization
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Ohio River and Mississippi River Minnesota River (lower branch) entering the Mississippi River Sacramento and Feather Rivers
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(Bridge, 2003) EntranceMixing
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(Robert, 2003) Flow Processes
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(Robert, 2003) Flow and Sediment Transport Processes
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Primary Flow Characteristics Entrance zones –Equivalent to riffle cross-over –Inherited helical flow pattern from upstream Confluence mixing zone –Super-elevation and two circulation cells –Shear layer and zones of flow separation –Sediment transport becomes spatially varied Localized erosion in scour hole ~4X average depth of incoming channels Localized deposition as side bars and downstream
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Braid Bar Development (Ashmore, 1993) Confluence-Diffluence Couplet
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Braid Bar Development (Ashmore, 1993)
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Confluence of the Jamuna and Ganges River, Bangladesh 10 X 13 km (Best and Ashworth, 1997) Up to 27 m below msl Significance of Scour Hole
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Driftless Area, SW Wisconsin Networks
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Turcotte (2007) Networks
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Network Organization (Bridge, 2003)
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Network Organization (Bridge, 2003) R b ~3 to 5R l ~1.5 to 3R A ~3 to 6 Hack (1957; e.u.)
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Network Organization Planer projection of river basins A = sL L where s is a shape factor If L /L constant for all A & s is constant, self-similar If L /L decreases as A increases, and s is constant, self-affine (basins elongate) (Rignon et al., 1996)
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Network Organization Stream length with area is fractal; L is sinuous Planer projection of river basins is self- affine—basins become elongated Stream length, h = 0.6 Elongation, h’ = 0.52 Stream length vs. diameter, 1.15 (Rignon et al., 1996)
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Network Organization (1) Woldenberg (1969, 1971) –Drainage basins develop as mixed hexagonal hierarchies of basin area (orders 3, 4, and 7) 1,3,9,27,81… (n = n-1 x 3) 1,4,16,64,256… 1,7,49,343… –Or Fibonaci series (1,3,4,7,11…; 1,4,5,9,14…) –A balance of least work and maximum entropy (both economies of energy loss by overland flow and through channels is minimized)
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Network Organization (2) Rodriguez-Iturbe et al. (1992)—tree-like structure of drainage networks is a combination of three energy principles –Minimum energy expenditure in any link –Equal energy expenditure per unit area of bed anywhere in the network –Minimum energy expenditure in the network as a whole where Q 0.5 and L are mean annual discharge and length of ith link and X is a constant
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Network Evolution Expansion Mode Network expands slowly Fully developed in the area Extension Mode Low-order channels elongate rapidly 1° streams are longer with smaller angles
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Network Evolution: Experimental Watershed 7.1 m 2.4 m Frame (storm)1234567891011121314151617181920 Timespan (min)851520 305090120180 20 3050 Total Time (min)8510012014016018020023028037049067085087089091093096010101060 Base-level drop
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Longitudinal Profiles Communication of forcing
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Headcuts Drivers of extension and incision
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Confluences, Networks, and River Restoration Confluences have not, as yet, been part of restoration design Junction angles, link lengths, and network organization clearly are part of a dynamically stable fluvial system Headcut morphodynamics in rills and gullies can be “drivers” of channel incision and evolution potentially analogous to rivers
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Confluences and Networks Conclusions Confluences have generalized flow patterns All flow, bed, and sediment parameters then are modified by this flow pattern Networks display systematic organization (self-similarity, self-affinity) that may represent some internal optimization (energy minimization)
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