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Page 7 of 16
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Streams and Watersheds - Stream Mechanics

Stream hydrology -- the study of water as it moves through stream channels -- is a complicated science. Fortunately, for our purposes this complexity can be simplified into a few basic concepts.

 

Stream channels -- the "pipelines" through which water flows -- are formed and maintained by the amount of water and sediment they are required to carry during the average bankfull flow, an event which normally occurs about every two years. In a stable stream the amounts of water and sediment that come into the channel on a regular basis are roughly equal to the amounts of both that leave it (Figure 1-6).

Figure 1-6
Stable streams balance the amount of water and sediment they carry.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Figure 1-7
Having downcut and then eroded laterally, this stream is now healing as it develops perennial vegetation on new banks.

When either water or sediment load changes, the stream is said to be "out of balance" and "trying to redefine itself" by creating a new shape which will accommodate the new conditions (Fig. 1-7).

An increase in upland or streamside erosion can result in more sediment than the stream can carry. One result might be a raising of the stream bed (aggradation) and the creation of a wider and shallower channel.

 

Conversely, the natural shape or slope of the channel might be modified (for example, by human activity such as channel straightening or the installation of riprap) so that the stream's water flow and sediment load are being confined into a channel that was not designed to handle them. If the same amount of water is still flowing into the channel from upstream, the stream may respond to this alteration by downcutting, because the flow is faster and hence cuts into the channel bottom. Or it may try to reestablish its old meander pattern, which will result in lateral instability (bank erosion) as water eats away at the streambanks. Either of these developments may increase the amount of sediment that enters the stream as well as causing other changes downstream or upstream.