HKDSE Geography/M2a/River Channels and Flow
This chapter discusses two things:
- Channel geometry - what the channel looks like.
- River flow - how fast a river flows and how much energy it has.
These two topics are closely related and are thus put under a single roof.
Definitions
[edit | edit source]- A channel is the path through which the river flows; it is only part of the river itself and does not include the water in the river.
- Velocity is the speed at which water flows. (m/s)
- Cross-sectional area is the area of a river's cross-section. (m2)
- Discharge is the volume of water passing a given point of a river in one second. (m3/s)
- Volume is the amount of water a river holds. (m3)
- Bankfull discharge is the maximum discharge a river can support without flooding.
- Capacity is the maximum volume of water a river can hold without flooding.
Volume and discharge Volume is the amount of water in the river. Discharge is the amount of water passing through a certain point of a river in a second. Using a protest march as an analogy, 'volume' would be the number of people in the march, and 'discharge' the number of people passing by a certain landmark in one minute. If you study economics, 'volume' is like a stock concept and 'discharge' a flow concept. |
Discharge is positively related to volume. Discharge is also positively related to velocity. The discharge is determined by factors that affect these.
Factors Affecting Water Volume and thus Discharge
[edit | edit source]These are factors that affect how much water there is, the 'software' of the river channel.
River discharge is positively related to overland flow, and therefore negatively related to infiltration.
- Slope gradient ↑ → Infiltration ↓, Surface run-off ↑ → Discharge ↑
- Vegetation cover ↑ → Interception ↑ → Infiltration ↑, Surface run-off ↑ → Discharge ↑
- Rock/soil permeability ↑ → Interception ↑ → Infiltration ↑, Surface run-off ↑ → Discharge ↓
Permeability is especially of note here. Here are just some factors that affect permeability:
Increase permeability | Decrease permeability |
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These relationships also matter:
- Drainage density ↑ → Discharge ↑
- Size of catchment area ↑ → Discharge ↑
- Stream order ↑ → Discharge ↑
The principle behind the above is that 'if there are more rivers, they can collect more.'
- Precipitation/Rainfall/Snowmelt ↑ → Discharge ↑ (take note of RH, temp., etc. relationships above)
- Evaporation ↑ → Discharge ↓ (take note of RH, temp., etc. relationships above)
Factors Affecting Velocity and thus Discharge (Channel-Related Factors)
[edit | edit source]These are factors that affect how fast the river flows, the 'hardware' of the river channel. It is related to the channel.
- Channel friction reduces velocity.
- The two sides of the river are river banks.
- The bottom of the river is the river bed.
- Wetted perimeter (WP) is the perimeter of the bank and bend in contact with water.
- Hydraulic radius (HR):
- Width-depth ratio is the ratio of the bank length to the bed length.
- A symmetrical river channel has the same bank shape on either side. If the shapes of the two banks are different, it's an asymmetric river channel.
- Load is the materials transported by the river (more below).
- Channel roughness is how rough the channel is.
The above parameters are related to discharge thus:
- WP↑ → Channel friction ↑ → Efficiency ↓ → Velocity ↓ → Discharge ↓
- HR↑ → Channel friction ↓ → Efficiency ↑ → Velocity ↑ → Discharge ↑ (this overrides the WP point!)
- Channel roughness ↑ → Channel friction ↑ → Efficiency ↓ → Velocity ↓ → Discharge ↓
- Asymmetric river channel → Channel friction ↑ → Efficiency ↓ → Velocity ↓ → Discharge ↓
- Amount of load ↑ → Internal friction ↑ → Efficiency ↓ → Velocity ↓ → Discharge ↓
Energy
[edit | edit source]Only one point to be made here:
- Discharge ↑ → Energy ↑
Thus all the factors above also affect energy.
Variation of Velocity and Energy Within a Channel
[edit | edit source]TODO