This site is 100% ad supported. Please add an exception to adblock for this site.

Chapter 6

Terms

undefined, object
copy deck
Bed load
The material involved in saltation or the traction load
Hydrosphere
All the water at and near the surface of the earth, 97% of which is in oceans
Levee
Raised bank along a stream channel
Factors governing flood severity
Quantity of water involved, extent of infiltration, topography, subsurface runoff, and vegetation
Alluvial fan
formed when a tributary stream flows into a more slowly flowing, larger stream, or a stream flows from mountains into a plain
How do you calculate the discharge?
The product of the area of the channel crosse section and the average stream velocity
Retention ponds
Large basins that trap some of the surface runoff
How do floodplains form?
The erosion on the cut banks and deposition of point bars on the inside banks of meanders and downstream meander migration produce them
Infiltration
Process by which surface water sinks into the ground
Upstream floods
Floods that affect only small, localized areas, most often caused by sudden, locally intense rainstorms and events like dam failure
Base level
Lowest elevation to which the stream can erode downward, for many streams, the water surface level of the body of water into which they flow
cut bank
downstream and outside side of the meander, flows somewhat faster
What are the main processes of the hydrologic cycle?
Evaporation into and precipitation out of the atmosphere
Saltation
Material of intermediate size is carried by short hops along the stream bed in the process
Drainage basin
Region from which a stream draws water
Load
Total quantity of material that a stream transports
Diversion channels
Redirect some of the water flow into areas adjacent to the stream where flooding will cause minimal damage
Delta
A fan-shaped deposit fo sediment formed at a stream's mouth
Crest
Maximum stage reached during a flood event
Stream
Body of flowing water confined within a channel, regardless of size
Stream capacity
Measure of the total load of material a stream can move
Peak lag time
Time lag between a precipitation event and peak flood discharge
Flood stage
When stream stage exceeds bank height
Channelization
General term for the various modifications of the stream channel itself that are usually intended to increase the velocity of water flow, volume of channel, or both
2 factors affecting flood severity
proportion and rate of surface runoff
Meander
The curve or bend in a stream channel
Braiding
If the sediment load of the stream is large, these channel islands can build up until they reach the surface; effectively dividng the channel in this process
Stream Gradient
Steepness of the stream channel
Point bars
Consist of sediment deposited on the insides of meanders, build out the banks in those parts of the channel
Suspended load
Material that is light or fine enough to be moved along suspended in the stream, supported by the flowing water
Downstream floods
Floods that affect large stream systems and large drainage basins
stage
Elevation of the water surface at any point
Flash floods
variety of upstream flood, characterized by especially rapid rise of stream stage
Floodplain
A broad, fairly flat expanse of land covered with sediment along the stream channel, called this, the area into which the stream spills over during floods
Braided stream
A stream with multiple channels that divide and rejoin
Oxbow
Old meanders now cut off or abandoned by a stream
How is stream gradient calculated?
The difference between two points along a stream divided by horizontal distance
What determines the size of a stream?
Area of the drainage basin, climate, vegetation, and underlying geology
Hydrologic cycle
The cycle through which water in the hydrosphere moves; includes such processes as evaporation, precipitation, and surface and groundwater runoff
Recurrence interval
How frequently a flood of a certain severity occurs on average for that stream; inverse of the probability of a flood
Flood frequency curve
A graph of stream stage or discharge as a function of recurrence interval (or annual probability of occurrence)
Flood
Condition in which stream stage is above channel bank height
What is the traction load?
Heavier debris may be rolled, dragged, or pushed along the bottom of the stream bed as this
Longitudinal profile
Diagram of elevation of a stream bed along its length
Discharge
Volume of water flowing past a given point in a specified length of time
Percolation
Process by which water is moved through soil and rock
How is capacity related to discharge?
The faster the water flows, the more water present, the more material can be moved
Dissolved load
Material that is completely dissolved in the water

Deck Info

48

permalink