1 research outputs found
Morphology and evolution of bars in a wandering gravel-bed river; lower Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada
A hierarchical typology for the channels and bars within aggradational wandering
gravel-bed rivers is developed from an examination of a 50 km reach of lower
Fraser River, British Columbia, Canada. Unit bars, built by stacking of gravelly
bedload sheets, are the key dynamic element of the sediment transfer system,
linking sediment transport during individual freshets to the creation, development
and remoulding of compound bar platforms that have either a lateral or medial
style. Primary and secondary unit bars are identified, respectively, as those that
deliver sediment to compound bars from the principal channel and those that
redistribute sediment across the compound bar via seasonal anabranches and
smaller channels. The record of bar accretion evident in ground penetrating radar
sequences is consistent with the long-term development of bar complexes derived
from historical aerial photographs. For two compound bars, inter-annual changes
associated with individual sediment transport episodes are measured using
detailed topographic surveys and longer-term changes are quantified using
sediment budgets derived for individual bars from periodic channel surveys.
Annual sediment turnover on the bars is comparable with the bed material transfer
rate along the channel, indicating that relatively little bed material bypasses the
bars. Bar construction and change are mainly accomplished by lateral accretion
since the river has limited capacity to raise bed load onto higher surfaces. Styles
of accretion and erosion and therefore the major bar-form morphologies on Fraser
River are familiar and consistent with those in gravelly braided channels, but the
wandering style does exhibit some distinctive features. For example, 65-year
histories reveal the potential for long sequences of uninterrupted accretion in
relatively stable wandering rivers that are unlikely in braided rivers