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Field measurements of the energy delivered to the channel bed by moving bed load and links to bedrock erosion
Author(s) -
Turowski Jens M.,
Böckli Martin,
Rickenmann Dieter,
Beer Alexander R.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: earth surface
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-9011
pISSN - 2169-9003
DOI - 10.1002/2013jf002765
Subject(s) - bed load , fluvial , bedrock , stream power , streams , erosion , geology , channel (broadcasting) , hydrology (agriculture) , environmental science , soil science , sediment transport , geomorphology , mechanics , geotechnical engineering , sediment , engineering , electrical engineering , computer network , physics , structural basin , computer science
Impact‐driven fluvial erosion is directly related to the energy delivered to the channel bed by moving bed load. Using a novel protocol, we have measured this energy in four mountain streams in Austria and Switzerland. Similar to bed load transport rates, the energy delivered to the bed displays large scatter over several orders of magnitude even for a constant discharge. We found that only a small fraction (<1%) of the total energy available to the stream is delivered to the bed and can be used for erosive work. Empirical predictive equations can be defined for specific sites, but there is large site‐to‐site variability. Prediction of energy delivered to the bed using the saltation‐abrasion model of bedrock erosion only provides the observed trends when measured bed load transport rates are used as input. Using an empirical transport law calibrated to the conditions at one of the study streams leads to overprediction of delivered energies by more than 2 orders of magnitude. This overprediction decreases with increasing discharge, and thus, at high discharges, better predictive results are obtained. We find a correlation between the channels' bed slope or characteristic grain sizes of the channel bed and the fraction of energy delivered to the bed of the total energy available to the stream. This observation provides a tentative link between fundamental fluvial incision processes to the stream power model family that has widely been used to model fluvial bedrock incision in landscape evolution simulations.