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Morphology and fluvial processes of the lower Red Deer River Valley, AlbertaMcPherson, Harold J., 1936- January 1966 (has links)
No description available.
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Surface exposure dating of stream terraces in the Chinese Pamir glacial chronology and paleoclimatic /Kirby, Benjamin Thomas, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio State University, 2008. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 49-59).
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Geospatial description of river channels in three dimensionsMerwade, Venkatesh. Maidment, David R. January 2004 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2004. / Supervisor: David R. Maidment. Vita. Includes bibliographical references. Also available from UMI.
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Associations between stream macroinvertebrate communities and surface substrate size distributions /Stamp, Jennifer D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, August, 2004. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-73).
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Accuracy of forest road and stream channel characteristics derived from LiDAR in forested mountain conditions a thesis /White, Russell Alan. Brian C. Dietterick. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--California Polytechnic State University, 2010. / Title from PDF title page; viewed on April 22, 2010. Major professor: Brian C. Ditterick, Ph.D., P.H. "Presented to the faculty of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo." "In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree [of] Master of Science in Forestry Sciences." "March 2010." Includes bibliographical references (p. 101-109).
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Associations between stream macroinvertebrate communities and surface substrate size distributionsStamp, Jennifer D. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Ohio University, August, 2004. / Title from PDF t.p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 71-73)
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Temporal variability of riverbed conductance at the Bolton well field along the Great Miami River, southwest Ohio characterization of riverbed sediments during low-flow conditions /Idris, Omonigho. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (M. En.)--Miami University, Institute of Environmental Sciences, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF document. Includes bibliographical references (p. 33-35).
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Current and historic stream channel response to changes in cattle and elk grazing pressure and beaver activityFouty, Suzanne Catherine January 2018 (has links)
656 pages / Livestock grazing and beaver trapping alter streams hydrologically and
geomorphically leading to declines in the quality and extent of stream-riparian
ecosystems. The influence of reductions in grazing pressure and fluctuating levels of
beaver activity (treatments) on channel capacity was studied at I 08 channel cross-sections,
located on eight headwater streams in Montana and Arizona. Cross-sections
were surveyed two or three times over a two-to-five year period to determine annual rates
of change as a function of treatment. Most cross-sections in the cattle and elk exclosures
and grazed areas showed minimal changes in area(< 10 percent). Large decreases in
cross-section area were observed in reaches with intact beaver dams, especially near the
dams. The beaver ponds reduced channel capacity between 50 to I 00% in most reaches,
compared to< 25% in reaches without beaver ponds. The ponds effectively restored the
hydrologic connection between the stream and valley floor in less than one year. Upon dam failure, channel capacity increased within a year by 40 percent or more as the ponds
drained and sediment eroded.
A conceptual model describing geomorphic and hydrologic response of a drainage
basin to the entry of beavers and then their removal or abandonment was developed,
based on a literature review and field data. The model suggests that the simultaneous
existence of discontinuous arroyos and wetlands, observed by Euro-American
expeditions to the Southwest prior to settlement, may in fact reflect landscapes
transforming due to recent beaver trapping rather than a recent climate shift. Beaver-dam
failures would trigger channelization and thus greater flood magnitudes as water was
more rapidly routed from upper to lower watersheds.
The study suggests that Euro-American trapping and grazing, though temporally
and spatially separated, combined with two recent periods of above-average precipitation
to transform drainage networks in the West and increase stream ecosystem sensitivity to
climatic variability. This transformation pre-dates the installation of stream gages and
the data collection that forms the current basis of our understanding hydraulic geometry
and fluvial processes. Consequently, current hydraulic geometry relationships and our
understanding of stream sensitivity to climatic variability reflect highly disturbed
watersheds and ecosystems, not intact systems. / Version has slight corrections to the original by the author, as specified in separately attached file Corrections_to_Fouty_2003_PhD_20181810.pdf
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An historical study of channel change in the Bell river, north eastern CapeDollar, E S J January 1993 (has links)
Channel instability has occurred in the Bell river, north eastern Cape, in the form of meander cutoffs, incipient meander cutoffs, channel straightening and general channel instability. Recent cutoffs occurred in 1974 and 1988. The study examines the spatial and temporal controls of channel form and pattern in the Bell river in order to assess the causes of channel instability. From the 17 km surveyed stretch, it was found that the main spatial controls of channel form were riparian vegetation density and channel bed material. Discharge as estimated in the field was not the main controlling variable of channel form. Two distinct groups of stream beds were identified from the survey; an upper gravel-bed stream and a lower sand-bed stream. These sites displayed distinct form ratios, channel gradients and bed material characteristics. The incidences of major channel instability were identified as being the transitional zone between the two reaches. Examination of temporal controls of channel form included climatic trend analysis and catchment sediment production analysis. Rainfall analysis indicated that no long term progressive trends in the annual or seasonal data existed. Distinct wet and dry cycles occur with peaks every 16 to 19 years. Wet cycles are the result of an increase in the frequency of daily events rather than in the magnitude of events. Flow record analysis demonstrated the relationship between regional discharge and upper catchment rainfall. Coincidence of peak flows and channel straightening were also noted. Soil erosion surveys showed that erosion had increased in the catchment and that accelerated erosion were probably the result of overstocking and poor veld management. It was concluded that channel changes in the Bell river are possibly the result of anthropogenic influence in catchment and channel processes. Increased sediment production to the channel resulted in channel aggradation with attendant instability. The plantation of riparian vegetation led to perimeter stability in the short term at flows less than bankfull discharge, but served to reduce cross-sectional area in the long term, thereby increasing the potential for flooding, meander cutoffs and channel change
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Geomorfologia antropogênica : mudanças no padrão de drenagem do canal principal e delta, no baixo curso da bacia hidrográfica do Rio Jequitinhonha/BA / Anthropogenic geomorphology : Changes in the hydrographic basins of river Jequitinhonha/BA lower course main channel drainage pattern and deltaSilva, Vinícius de Amorim 20 August 2018 (has links)
Orientador: Archimedes Perez Filho / Tese (doutorado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Geociências / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-20T23:58:29Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
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Previous issue date: 2012 / Resumo: As alterações antropogênicas da morfologia dos subsistemas canal fluvial principal e delta permitiram interpretar as diversas dinâmicas que o sistema rio Jequitinhonha, está submetido, em seu baixo curso. A caracterização, identificação e análise no padrão de drenagem no canal principal e Delta foram possíveis investigando os parâmetros: índice de sinuosidade, morfologia do canal, migração de meandros do canal, vazão, datação por luminescência opticamente estimulada, descrição granulométrica, biológica e cromática dos sedimentos no Delta. Os resultados demonstraram que se identificou o aumento da complexidade sistêmica pela intervenção antropogênica no sistema hidrográfico. Dessa forma, sugere-se que a morfologia do delta, pode estar sendo modificada para que o rio estabeleça um novo equilíbrio geomorfológico em resposta à construção da barragem e retificação do canal fluvial principal. Sugere-se que ao passar do tempo a forma do delta vai se alterar como já está acontecendo, abandonando a sua configuração bifurcada e transformando-se em canal único em direção à sua margem esquerda, desaparecendo-se o canal localizado em na sua margem direita / Abstract: The anthropogenic changes of the morphology of the main river channel and delta allowed to interpret the diverse dynamics to which the Rio Jequitinhonha system was submitted, in its lower course. The drainage pattern characterization, identification and analysis in the main channel and Delta were possible investigating the parameters: sinuosity index, channel morphology, channel neighborhood migration, optically stimulated luminescence dating, granulometric, biological and chromatic description of the sediments in the outfall and Delta. The results showed the identification of the rising systemic complexity due to the anthropogenic intervention in the hydrographic system. So, it is suggested that the delta morphology may have been modified in order to the river to establish a new geomorphological balance, to respond to the construction of the barrage and main channel rectification. It is suggested that with time the form of the delta will be altered in the way it is happening now, abandoning its bisected configuration and transforming in a single channel directed to the left margin, with the disappearance of the channel located in its right margin / Doutorado / Análise Ambiental e Dinâmica Territorial / Doutor em Geografia
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