## Abstract Seepage meters modified for use in flowing water were used to directly measure rates of exchange between surface and subsurface water in a gravelβ and cobble bed river in western Pennsylvania, USA (Allegheny River, __Q__~mean~ = 190 m^3^/s) and a sandβ and gravelβbed river in Colorado,
Temporal and spatial variability in thalweg profiles of a gravel-bed river
β Scribed by Madej, Mary Ann
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 390 KB
- Volume
- 24
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0360-1269
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β¦ Synopsis
This study used successive longitudinal thalweg profiles in gravel-bed rivers to monitor changes in bed topography following floods and associated large sediment inputs. Variations in channel bed elevations, distributions of residual water depths, percentage of channel length occupied by riffles, and a spatial autocorrelation coefficient (Moran's I) were used to quantify changes in morphological diversity and spatial structure in Redwood Creek basin, northwestern California. Bed topography in Redwood Creek and its major tributaries consists primarily of a series of pools and riffles. The size, frequency and spatial distribution of the pools and riffles have changed significantly during the past 20 years. Following large floods and high sediment input in Redwood Creek and its tributaries in 1975, variation in channel bed elevations was low and the percentage of the channel length occupied by riffles was high. Over the next 20 years, variation in bed elevations increased while the length of channel occupied by riffles decreased. An index [(standard deviation of residual water depth/bankfull depth) Γ 100] was developed to compare variations in bed elevation over a range of stream sizes, with a higher index being indicative of greater morphological diversity. Spatial autocorrelation in the bed elevation data was apparent at both fine and coarse scales in many of the thalweg profiles and the observed spatial pattern of bed elevations was found to be related to the dominant channel material and the time since disturbance. River reaches in which forced pools dominated, and in which large woody debris and bed particles could not be easily mobilized, exhibited a random distribution of bed elevations. In contrast, in reaches where alternate bars dominated, and both wood and gravel were readily transported, regularly spaced bed topography developed at a spacing that increased with time since disturbance. This pattern of regularly spaced bed features was reversed following a 12-year flood when bed elevations became more randomly arranged.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Seepage rate and direction measured with a seepage metre modified for use in flowing water were greatly variable along a 300βm reach of a shallow, gravelβbed river and depended primarily on the localβscale bed topography. The median value of seepage measured at 24 locations was 24 cm/da
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