Relationship of point bar morphology to channel curvature and planform evolution

被引:7
|
作者
Rowley, Taylor [1 ]
Konsoer, Kory [1 ,2 ]
Langendoen, Eddy J. [3 ]
Li, Zhi [4 ]
Ursic, Mick [3 ]
Garcia, Marcelo H. [4 ]
机构
[1] Louisiana State Univ, Dept Geog & Anthropol, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
[2] Louisiana State Univ, Inst Coastal Studies, Baton Rouge, LA 70803 USA
[3] USDA ARS, Natl Sedimentat Lab, Oxford, MS 38655 USA
[4] Univ Illinois, Ven Te Chow Hydrosyst Lab, Urbana, IL USA
关键词
Channel migration; Centerline curvature; Transverse slope; 3-DIMENSIONAL FLOW STRUCTURE; OUTER BANK ROUGHNESS; MEANDERING RIVERS; BRITISH-COLUMBIA; BED MORPHOLOGY; BEND THEORY; MIGRATION; PATTERNS; MODEL; ARCHITECTURE;
D O I
10.1016/j.geomorph.2020.107541
中图分类号
P9 [自然地理学];
学科分类号
0705 ; 070501 ;
摘要
Point bars are prominent features in meandering rivers, yet our understanding of the complex interactions among the morphology of the point bars to channel planform and curvature remains incomplete. This study seeks to address the extent to which channel centerline curvature can explain point bar morphology. High-resolution elevation datasets obtained from multibeam sonar and structure-from-motion surveys are used to characterize point bar morphology on twelve point bars within two river systems; the Pearl and Wabash rivers. Spatial series of centerline curvature are compared to channel and point bar characteristics including width, migration rate, centerline longitudinal bed elevation, transverse bed slope, and a shape factor. Results show that the Wabash reach has overall lower channel curvature values and higher rates of migration compared to the Pearl reach. However, the spatial lag between curvature and width and migration rate are similar between reaches. The mode of bend migration differs between the two reaches, where the Pearl reach has bends mostly evolving through translation downstream, and along the Wabash reach, one bend is expanding, two bends are mostly stationary, and three bends are translating downstream. The translating bends in both reaches exhibit bilinear (a pronounced break in slope) and near-horizontal (a pronounced break in slope with a nearly flat bar top) transverse bar profiles and maximum rates of migration downstream of the apex. The Pearl reach has a systematic distribution of transverse bar profiles where linear profiles are found along the bar head and bar tail, and near-horizontal profiles are concentrated along the middle bar. The distribution along the bars of the Wabash reach is less systematic, with fewer near-horizontal profiles overall. Finally, to evaluate the influence of curvature on the channel bed and bar morphology, the field data are compared to synthetic bed elevation data generated using pyRiverBed, a centerline curvature-driven bed evolution model that maintains a constant width. Analyses reveal the synthetic morphologic data agree reasonably well with the characteristics and magnitude of the field observations, with a mean absolute error of 0.9 and 1.2 m for the Pearl and Wabash rivers, respectively. Values of transverse slope were also compared between the field and synthetic data and the synthetic data are consistently under-predicted along the Pearl. Differences observed between the field and synthetic data are the result of variability in the natural river system not captured by the model including channel width, the presence of local bedrock outcrops, and abrupt changes in curvature. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Planform evolution of a sinuous channel triggered by curvature and autogenic width oscillations due to generic grain transport
    Mahato, Rajesh K.
    Dey, Subhasish
    Ali, Sk Zeeshan
    PHYSICS OF FLUIDS, 2022, 34 (04)
  • [2] Impacts of Cutoff on Flow Structure and Planform Evolution in a Conceptual Meandering Channel
    Jia, Dongdong
    Zhang, Xibao
    Peng, Wenliang
    Li, Wei
    Qian, Lihui
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 35TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, VOLS I AND II, 2013, : 4388 - 4394
  • [3] Determining flow directions in river channel networks using planform morphology and topology
    Schwenk, Jon
    Piliouras, Anastasia
    Rowland, Joel C.
    EARTH SURFACE DYNAMICS, 2020, 8 (01) : 87 - 102
  • [4] Morphology of bar-built estuaries: empirical relation between planform shape and depth distribution
    Leuven, Jasper R. F. W.
    Selakovic, Sanja
    Kleinhans, Maarten G.
    EARTH SURFACE DYNAMICS, 2018, 6 (03) : 763 - 778
  • [5] Evolution of Char Lands in the Padma River in Bangladesh and its Impacts on Planform Morphology of the River
    Islam, Raihanul
    Mohonto, Shovon
    Noor, Fahmida
    SSRN,
  • [6] Thin interbed architecture analysis for meandering channel point bar
    Yan, Baiquan
    Kang, Hongqing
    Ma, Shizhong
    Long, Wang
    Li, Na
    He, Xin
    Journal of Information and Computational Science, 2012, 9 (08): : 2175 - 2183
  • [7] THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN MANDIBULAR MORPHOLOGY AND APICAL ROOT CURVATURE IN MAN
    MARKLUND, M
    PERSSON, M
    ARCHIVES OF ORAL BIOLOGY, 1988, 33 (06) : 391 - 394
  • [8] RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CHANNEL MIGRATION AND RADIUS OF CURVATURE ON THE RED RIVER
    BIEDENHARN, DS
    COMBS, PG
    HILL, GJ
    PINKARD, CF
    PINKSTON, CB
    SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MODELING: PROCEEDINGS OF AN INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM, 1989, : 536 - 541
  • [9] Bar formation and evolution in disc galaxies with gas and a triaxial halo: morphology, bar strength and halo properties
    Athanassoula, E.
    Machado, Rubens E. G.
    Rodionov, S. A.
    MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, 2013, 429 (03) : 1949 - 1969
  • [10] Assessing common downdrift control point and asymmetric double-curvature planform behind multiple detached breakwaters: Simple empirical method
    Lee, Jung L.
    Lim, Changbin
    Pranzini, Enzo
    Yu, M. J.
    Chu, J. C.
    Chen, C. J.
    Hsu, John R. C.
    COASTAL ENGINEERING, 2023, 185