Numerical Simulation of Effects of Sediment Supply on Bedrock Channel Morphology

2016 ◽  
Vol 142 (7) ◽  
pp. 04016014 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Inoue ◽  
T. Iwasaki ◽  
G. Parker ◽  
Y. Shimizu ◽  
N. Izumi ◽  
...  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jens M. Turowski ◽  
Rebecca Hodge

Abstract. The cover effect in fluvial bedrock erosion is a major control on bedrock channel morphology and long-term channel dynamics. Here, we suggest a probabilistic framework for the description of the cover effect that can be applied to field, laboratory and modelling data and thus allows the comparison of results from different sources. The framework describes the formation of sediment cover as a function of the probability of sediment being deposited on already alleviated areas of the bed. We define benchmark cases and suggest physical interpretations of deviations from these benchmarks. Furthermore, we develop a reach-scale model for sediment transfer in a bedrock channel and use it to clarify the relations between the sediment mass residing on the bed, the exposed bedrock fraction and the transport stage. We derive system time scales and investigate cover response to cyclic perturbations. The model predicts that bedrock channels achieve grade in steady state by adjusting bed cover. Thus, bedrock channels have at least two characteristic time scales of response. Over short time scales, the degree of bed cover is adjusted such that they can just transport the supplied sediment load, while over long time scales, channel morphology evolves such that the bedrock incision rate matches the tectonic uplift or base level lowering rate.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiamei Wang ◽  
Marwan A. Hassan ◽  
Matteo Saletti ◽  
Xingyu Chen ◽  
Xudong Fu ◽  
...  

<p>Steep step-pool streams are often coupled to adjacent hillslope, directly receiving episodic sediment supply from mass movement processes such as landslides and debris flows. The response of step-pool channels to the variations in sediment supply remains largely unexplored. We conducted flume experiments with a poorly sorted grain-size distribution in an 8%-steep, 5-m long flume with variable width at the University of British Columbia, to study the effects of episodic sediment supply on channel evolution. After a conditioning phase with no feed, the channel was subjected to sediment pulses of different magnitude and frequency under constant flow discharge. High-resolution data of hydraulics, bedload transport, bed surface grain size, and channel morphology were collected every 10-20 minutes and an additional time at the end of each pulse.</p><p>In response to sediment pulses, we recorded an increase in bedload transport rates, channel aggradation, bed surface fining, and continuous step formation and collapse. In between pulses, bedload rates dropped by several orders of magnitude, net erosion occurred, the bed surface gradually coarsened, and steps became more stable. The small-magnitude high-frequency pulses caused smaller but more frequent spikes in bedload transport, bed surface evolution, and thus step stability. Instead, the large-magnitude low-frequency pulses cause larger changes but provided a longer time for the channel to recover. This suggests that in step-pool channels pulse magnitude is a key control on channel rearrangement, while pulse frequency controls how fast and strong the recovery is.</p><p>The frequency and stability of steps varied as a function of local channel width, showing that channel geometry is a primary control on step formation and stability even under episodic sediment supply conditions. Instead, the effect of sediment pulses is less important because the total number and average survival time of steps were similar among runs with different pulses. The critical Shields stress decreased following sediment pulses, then increased immediately after, and fluctuated until the next pulse. The variations in sediment supply caused cycles in bedload transport rate, surface and bedload texture, thus controlling the variability in the threshold for motion.</p><p>Our results indicate that episodic sediment supply is a primary control on the evolution of step-pool channels, with sediment feed magnitude affecting mostly morphological changes, and sediment feed frequency controlling channel stability.</p>


2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Saletti ◽  
Peter Molnar ◽  
Marwan A. Hassan ◽  
Paolo Burlando

Abstract. A new particle-based reduced-complexity model, CAST, to simulate sediment transport and channel morphology in steep streams is presented. CAST contains phenomenological parameterizations, deterministic or stochastic, of sediment supply, bed load transport, particle entrainment and deposition in a cellular-automaton space with uniform grain size. The model can reproduce a realistic bed morphology and typical fluctuations in transport rates observed in steep channels. Particle hop distances, from entrainment to deposition, are well-fitted by exponential distributions, in agreement with field data. The effect of stochasticity both in the entrainment and in the input rate is shown. A stochastic parameterization of the entrainment is essential to create and maintain a realistic channel morphology, while sediment transport in CAST shreds the input signal and its stochastic variability. A jamming routine has been added to CAST to simulate the grain-grain and grain-bed interactions that lead to particle jamming and step formation in a step-pool stream. The results show that jamming is effective in generating steps in unsteady conditions. Steps are created during high- flow periods and they survive during low flows only in sediment- starved conditions, in agreement with the jammed-state hypothesis of Church and Zimmermann (2007). Reduced-complexity models such as CAST can give new insight into the dynamics of complex phenomena (such as sediment transport and bedform stability) and be useful to test research hypotheses, being an effective complement to fully physically-based models.


2001 ◽  
Vol 113 (9) ◽  
pp. 1205-1212 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ellen E. Wohl ◽  
David M. Merritt

Author(s):  
J Venditti ◽  
P Nelson ◽  
M Lamb ◽  
W Dietrich ◽  
E.Yager ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 549-566 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matteo Saletti ◽  
Peter Molnar ◽  
Marwan A. Hassan ◽  
Paolo Burlando

Abstract. A new particle-based reduced-complexity model to simulate sediment transport and channel morphology in steep streams in presented. The model CAST (Cellular Automaton Sediment Transport) contains phenomenological parameterizations, deterministic or stochastic, of sediment supply, bed load transport, and particle entrainment and deposition in a cellular-automaton space with uniform grain size. The model reproduces a realistic bed morphology and typical fluctuations in transport rates observed in steep channels. Particle hop distances, from entrainment to deposition, are well fitted by exponential distributions, in agreement with field data. The effect of stochasticity in both the entrainment and the input rate is shown. A stochastic parameterization of the entrainment is essential to create and maintain a realistic channel morphology, while the intermittent transport of grains in CAST shreds the input signal and its stochastic variability. A jamming routine has been added to CAST to simulate the grain–grain and grain–bed interactions that lead to particle jamming and step formation in a step-pool stream. The results show that jamming is effective in generating steps in unsteady conditions. Steps are created during high-flow periods and they survive during low flows only in sediment-starved conditions, in agreement with the jammed-state hypothesis of Church and Zimmermann (2007). Reduced-complexity models like CAST give new insights into the dynamics of complex phenomena such as sediment transport and bedform stability and are a useful complement to fully physically based models to test research hypotheses.


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