Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA

Bedrock rivers are commonly expected to have steeper and narrower channels than alluvial rivers. However, understanding of bedrock river characteristics has largely been based on small samples of sites in specific climates and upland locations. We provide the first systematic assessment of bedrock a...

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Main Authors: Buckley, J, Hodge, RA, Slater, LJ
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Geological Society of America 2024
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author Buckley, J
Hodge, RA
Slater, LJ
author_facet Buckley, J
Hodge, RA
Slater, LJ
author_sort Buckley, J
collection OXFORD
description Bedrock rivers are commonly expected to have steeper and narrower channels than alluvial rivers. However, understanding of bedrock river characteristics has largely been based on small samples of sites in specific climates and upland locations. We provide the first systematic assessment of bedrock and alluvial river channel characteristics for 1274 sites across a broad climatic gradient. We assess whether the width, width-to-depth ratio, and slope of bedrock channels differ from those of alluvial channels and the extent to which these differences are correlated with drainage area, mean annual flow (QMAF), grain size, and lithology. We find that bedrock channels occur at all drainage areas. For the same drainage area, bedrock channels are wider and steeper than alluvial channels. They also have a higher mean annual precipitation and hence QMAF, which likely causes the increased width. After accounting for differences in QMAF, both bedrock and alluvial channels have similar hydraulic scaling. Lithology affects both types of channels in a similar way, with channels on sedimentary lithologies being wider and less steep compared to those on igneous-metamorphic lithologies. Overall, our findings raise new questions about the evolution of bedrock river channels and pave the way for more accurate landscape evolution modeling.
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spelling oxford-uuid:7df1448c-809e-4ae1-a582-1a9927c4171c2024-07-18T10:51:13ZBedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USAJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:7df1448c-809e-4ae1-a582-1a9927c4171cEnglishSymplectic ElementsGeological Society of America2024Buckley, JHodge, RASlater, LJBedrock rivers are commonly expected to have steeper and narrower channels than alluvial rivers. However, understanding of bedrock river characteristics has largely been based on small samples of sites in specific climates and upland locations. We provide the first systematic assessment of bedrock and alluvial river channel characteristics for 1274 sites across a broad climatic gradient. We assess whether the width, width-to-depth ratio, and slope of bedrock channels differ from those of alluvial channels and the extent to which these differences are correlated with drainage area, mean annual flow (QMAF), grain size, and lithology. We find that bedrock channels occur at all drainage areas. For the same drainage area, bedrock channels are wider and steeper than alluvial channels. They also have a higher mean annual precipitation and hence QMAF, which likely causes the increased width. After accounting for differences in QMAF, both bedrock and alluvial channels have similar hydraulic scaling. Lithology affects both types of channels in a similar way, with channels on sedimentary lithologies being wider and less steep compared to those on igneous-metamorphic lithologies. Overall, our findings raise new questions about the evolution of bedrock river channels and pave the way for more accurate landscape evolution modeling.
spellingShingle Buckley, J
Hodge, RA
Slater, LJ
Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA
title Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA
title_full Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA
title_fullStr Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA
title_full_unstemmed Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA
title_short Bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow: hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the USA
title_sort bedrock rivers are steep but not narrow hydrological and lithological controls on river geometry across the usa
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AT hodgera bedrockriversaresteepbutnotnarrowhydrologicalandlithologicalcontrolsonrivergeometryacrosstheusa
AT slaterlj bedrockriversaresteepbutnotnarrowhydrologicalandlithologicalcontrolsonrivergeometryacrosstheusa