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Streams
Stream
Terminology and Definitions
by
A stream is any body of running water that occupies a channel.
It is
normally above ground, eroding the land that it flows over and depositing
sediment as it travels.
A stream
can, however, be located underground or even underneath a glacier.
While most of
us speak of rivers, geoscientists tend to call everything a stream.
The boundary
between the two can get a little blurry, but in general, a river is
a large surface stream. It is made up of many smaller rivers or streams.
Streams
smaller than rivers, roughly in order of size, may be called branches or forks,
creeks, brooks, runnels, and rivulets. The very smallest kind of stream, just a
trickle, is a rill.
Characteristics of Streams
Streams may
be permanent or intermittent — occurring only part of the time.
So you could
say that the most important part of a stream is its channel or
streambed, the natural passage or depression in the ground that holds the
water.
The channel
is always there even if no water is running in it.
The deepest
part of the channel, the route taken by the last (or first) bit of water, is
called the thalweg (TALL-vegg,
from the German for "valley way").
The sides of
the channel, along the edges of the stream, are its banks. A
stream channel has a right bank and a left bank: you tell which is which by
looking downstream.
Stream
channels have four different channel
patterns, the shapes they show when viewed from above or
on a map.
The curviness
of a channel is measured by its sinuosity, which is the ratio between the length of the thalweg and
the distance downstream along the stream valley.
Straight
channels are linear or nearly so, with a sinuosity of nearly 1.
Sinuous
channels curve back and forth.
Meandering
channels curve very strongly, with a sinuosity of 1.5 or more (although sources
differ on the exact number).
Braided
channels split and rejoin, like the braids in hair or a rope.
The top end
of a stream, where its flow begins, is its source. The
bottom end is its mouth.
In between,
the stream flows through its main course or trunk.
Streams gain
their water through runoff, the
combined input of water from the surface and subsurface.
Understanding Stream Order
Most streams
are tributaries, meaning that they drain into other streams.
An important
concept in hydrology is stream order. A stream's order is determined by the number of tributaries
that flow into it.
First-order
streams have no tributaries.
Two
first-order streams combine to make a second-order stream; two second-order
streams combine to make a third-order stream, and so on.
For context,
the Amazon River is a 12th order stream, the Nile an 11th, the Mississippi a
tenth and the Ohio an eighth.
Together, the
first through third-order tributaries making up the source of a river are known
as its headwaters.
These make up
approximately 80% of all of the streams on Earth. Many large rivers divide as
they near their mouths; those streams are distributaries.
A river that
meets the sea or a large lake may form a delta at its mouth: a triangle-shaped area of sediment with
distributaries flowing across it.
The area of
water around a river mouth where seawater mixes with freshwater is called an estuary.
Land Around a Stream
The land
around a stream is a valley. Valleys come
in all sizes and have a variety of names, just like streams.
The smallest
streams, rills, run in tiny channels also called rills. Rivulets and runnels
run in gullies.
Brooks and
creeks run in washes or ravines or arroyos or
gulches as well as small valleys with other names.
Rivers (large
streams) have proper valleys, which may range from canyons to enormous flat
lands like the Mississippi River Valley.
The larger,
deeper valleys are usually v-shaped. The depth and steepness of a river valley
depends on the size, slope, and speed of the river as well as composition of
the bedrock.
Edited by Brooks Mitchell
Andrew Alden
· Professional geologist,
writer, photographer, and geological tour guide
· Thirty-seven years of
experience writing about geological subjects
· Six years as a research guide
with U.S. Geological Survey (USGS)
· Member of Geological Society of America (GSA), and American
Geophysical Union (AGU)
Experience
Andrew Alden is a former writer for ThoughtCo who contributed
hundreds of articles for more than 17 years. Andrew works as a geologist,
writer, editor, and photographer. He has written on geological subjects since
1981 and participates actively in his field. For example, Andrew spent six
years as a research guide with the U.S. Geological Survey, leading excursions on both
land land and at sea. And since 1992, he has hosted the earthquakes conference
for the online discussion platform, The Well, which began as a dialogue
between the writers and readers of the Whole Earth Review.
In addition, Andrew is a longtime member of the member of
the Geological Society of America — an international
society that serves members in academia, government, and industry; and
the American Geophysical Union — a community of
earth and space scientists that advances the power of science to ensure a
sustainable future.
Andrew lives in Oakland, California; and though he writes
about the whole planet and beyond, Andrew finds his own city full of
interest too and blogs about its geology.
Education
Andrew Alden holds a bachelor's (B.A.) degree in Earth
Science from the University of New Hampshire, College of Engineering and
Physical Sciences, in Durham, N.H.
Awards and Publications
· Andrew Alden on Earthquakes (The Well Group, Inc., 2011)
· Assessment
of River — Floodplain Aquifer Interactions (Environmental and Engineering
Geoscience, 1997)
· Andrew Alden on Hosting (The
Well Group, Inc., 1995)
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