6 research outputs found
Sorting out river channel patterns
Rivers self-organize their pattern/planform through feedbacks between bars, channels, floodplain and
vegetation, which emerge as a result of the basic spatial sorting process of wash load sediment and bed
sediment. The balance between floodplain formation and destruction determines the width and pattern of
channels. Floodplain structure affects the style and rate of channel avulsion once aggradation takes place.
Downstream fining of bed sediment and the sediment balance of fines in the pores of the bed sediment
provide the ‘template’ or sediment boundary conditions, from which sorting at smaller scales leads to the
formation of distinct channel patterns. Bar patterns provide the template of bank erosion and formation
as well as the dynamics of the channel network through bifurcation destabilization. However, so far we have
been unable to obtain dynamic meandering in laboratory experiments and in physics-based models that can
also produce braiding, which reflects our lack of understanding of what causes the different river patterns