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Stream power

About: Stream power is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 1135 publications have been published within this topic receiving 51324 citations.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, Wood load, channel parameters and valley parameters were surveyed in 50 contiguous stream segments each 25m in length along 12 streams in the Colorado Front Range, and the length and diameter of each piece of wood were measured, and each piece was tallied as a ramp, buried, bridge or unattached.
Abstract: Wood load, channel parameters and valley parameters were surveyed in 50 contiguous stream segments each 25 m in length along 12 streams in the Colorado Front Range. Length and diameter of each piece of wood were measured, and the orientation of each piece was tallied as a ramp, buried, bridge or unattached. These data were then used to evaluate longitudinal patterns of wood distribution in forested headwater streams of the Colorado Front Range, and potential channel-, valley- and watershed-scale controls on these patterns. We hypothesized that (i) wood load decreases downstream, (ii) wood is non-randomly distributed at channel lengths of tens to hundreds of meters as a result of the presence of wood jams and (iii) the proportion of wood clustered into jams increases with drainage area as a result of downstream increases in relative capacity of a stream to transport wood introduced from the adjacent riparian zone and valley bottom. Results indicate a progressive downstream decrease in wood load within channels, and correlations between wood load and drainage area, elevation, channel width, bed gradient and total stream power. Results support the first and second hypotheses, but are inconclusive with respect to the third hypothesis. Wood is non-randomly distributed at lengths of tens to hundreds of meters, but the proportion of pieces in jams reaches a maximum at intermediate downstream distances within the study area. We use these results to propose a conceptual model illustrating downstream trends in wood within streams of the Colorado Front Range. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

116 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors used Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) coupled with catchment area based discharge estimation techniques to model downstream trends in channel gradient, total stream power, and in riverscapes conducive to regime analysis, also specific stream power.

115 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the relative role of slope length, slope gradient, surface roughness, and soil hydrologic properties on determining the pollution control effectiveness of vegetated buffer zones is examined.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated the performance of the Bagnold stream power formula, the Meyer-Peter and Muller formula, and a stream power correlation on the Vedder River.

113 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a digital elevation model and field surveys were used to constrain channel morphology for an ∼90 km stretch of river to calculate unit stream power and boundary shear stress along the river path.
Abstract: River morphology and dynamics are strongly influenced by active tectonics. We report channel dynamics for the Peikang River, which flows through the Hsuehshan Range in central Taiwan. Using a digital elevation model and field surveys, we constrain channel morphology for an ∼90 km stretch of river to calculate unit stream power and boundary shear stress along the river path. Incision rates are estimated with optically stimulated luminescence dating of sand deposited on strath terraces. We find a strong correlation between unit stream power/shear stress and incision rate, but only if variation in channel width is considered. A calibrated river incision rule implies river incision rates of ∼9–13.5 mm/yr upstream of the Meiyuan and Tili faults and suggests that one or both of these structures are presently active. Our results indicate that the Shuilikeng fault is also actively deforming, as incision rates increase to ∼6–10 mm/yr across it, compared to 1–4 mm/yr in adjacent reaches. Prominent narrowing across the Shuilikeng fault, and the absence of significant gradient variation indicate that channel width is a first-order morphological adjustment to differential incision. Only when the channel width-to-depth ratio reaches a minimum does the channel slope significantly adjust to local changes in base level, as is the case upstream of the Meiyuan and Tili faults.

112 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
202351
2022103
202154
202067
201952
201847