scholarly journals Controls on the hydraulic geometry of alluvial channels: bank stability to gravitational failure, the critical-flow hypothesis, and conservation of mass and energy

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 379-391
Author(s):  
Jon D. Pelletier

Abstract. The bank-full depths, widths, depth-averaged water velocities, and along-channel slopes of alluvial channels are approximately power-law functions of bank-full discharge across many orders of magnitude. What mechanisms give rise to these patterns is one of the central questions of fluvial geomorphology. Here it is proposed that the bank-full depths of alluvial channels are partially controlled by the maximum heights of gravitationally stable channel banks, which depend on bank material cohesion and hence on clay content. The bank-full depths predicted by a bank-stability model correlate with observed bank-full depths estimated from the bends in the stage–discharge rating curves of 387 U.S. Geological Survey gaging stations in the Mississippi River basin. It is further proposed that depth-averaged water velocities scale with bank-full depths as a result of a self-regulatory feedback among water flow, relative roughness, and channel-bed morphology that limits depth-averaged water velocities to within a relatively narrow range associated with Froude numbers that have a weak inverse relationship to bank-full discharge. Given these constraints on channel depths and water velocities, bank-full widths and along-channel slopes consistent with observations follow by conservation of mass and energy of water flow.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jon D. Pelletier

Abstract. The bankfull depths, widths, depth-averaged water velocities, and along-channel slopes of alluvial channels are approximately power-law functions of bankfull discharge across many orders of magnitude. What mechanisms give rise to these patterns is one of the central questions of fluvial geomorphology. Here it is proposed that the bankfull depths of alluvial channels are partially controlled by the maximum heights of gravitationally stable channel banks, which depend on bank material cohesion and hence on clay content. The bankfull depths predicted by a bank-stability model correlate with observed bankfull depths estimated from the bends in the stage-discharge rating curves of 387 U.S. Geological Survey gaging stations in the Mississippi River Basin. It is further proposed that depth-averaged water velocities scale with bankfull depths as a result of a self-regulatory feedback among water flow, relative roughness, and channel-bed morphology that limits depth-averaged water velocities to be within a relatively narrow range associated with Froude numbers that have a weak inverse relationship to bankfull discharge. Given these constraints on channel depths and water velocities, bankfull widths and along-channel slopes consistent with observations follow by conservation of mass and energy of water flow.


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