EP42B-04
The topographic design of river channels for form-process linkages

Thursday, 17 December 2015: 11:05
2005 (Moscone West)
Rocko A Brown1, Gregory B Pasternack2 and Jason White1, (1)Environmental Science Associates, Sacramento, CA, United States, (2)University of California Davis, Land, Air, and Water Resources, Davis, CA, United States
Abstract:
Scientists and engineers design river topography for a wide variety of uses, such as experimentation, site remediation, dam mitigation, flood management, and river restoration. A recent advancement has been the notion of topographical design to yield specific fluvial mechanisms in conjunction with natural or environmental flow releases. For example, the flow convergence routing mechanism, whereby shear stress and spatially convergent flow migrate or jump from the topographic high (riffle) to the low point (pool) from low to high discharge, is thought to be a key process able to maintain undular relief in gravel bedded rivers. This work develops an approach to creating riffle-pool topography with a form-process linkage to the flow convergence routing mechanism using an adjustable, quasi equilibrium synthetic channel model. The link from form to process is made through conceptualizing form-process relationships for riffle-pool couplets into geomorphic covariance structures (GCSs) that are then quantitatively embedded in a synthetic channel model. Herein, GCSs were used to parameterize a geometric model to create five straight, synthetic river channels with varying combinations of bed and width undulations. Shear stress and flow direction predictions from 2D hydrodynamic modeling were used to determine if scenarios recreated aspects of the flow convergence routing mechanism. Results show that the creation of riffle-pool couplets that experience flow convergence in straight channels require GCSs with positively covarying bed and width undulations in their topography as supported in the literature. This shows that GCSs are a useful way to translate conceptualizations models of form-process linkages into quantitative models of channel form. Beyond synthetic examples, several real-world examples of restoration projects that use this approach are shown and discussed.