Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

1074 SEDIMENT TRANSPORT AND EROSION


(4) “base level”  the local level to which a stream tends to
cut its bed.
Lane contended that there is a natural tendency for a bal-
ance between the products in Eq. (38). For example, if one
of the factors, Q s , is decreased then, in order to balance the
equation, the stream slope might also tend to decrease, i.e.
degradation. On the other hand an increase in Q s could lead
to an increase in S, i.e. aggradation.

The Regime Approach

“The dimensions (width, depth, and slope) of a channel
to carry a given discharge, with a given silt load, are fixed by
nature, i.e. uniquely determined.” A channel whose dimen-
sions are so established is said to be in regime.
In the geological sense 3,10 a river system is never really
in equilibrium. According to W.M. Davis, who postulated a
geomorphological cycle, 3,10 the agents of uplift and gravity
(represented mainly by steam erosion) are always opposing
each other. However, from the engineering point of view, a

stream can be considered to be in “equilibrium” over a period
of a few decades if its average behavior or average dimen-
sions remain unchanged. There are always fluctuations, of
the channel geometry, about this average; thus the steam is
sometimes said to be in “dynamic equilibrium.”
Of course, a stream may be aggrading or degrading (on
the average in Engineering time) and thus it is not in equi-
librium. The regime theory could be used to predict the ulti-
mate dimensions of a stream that is not in regime.
Kennedy^40 and Lindley^41 collected data from canals in
India (Pakistan) and proposed an equation for the non-filtering,
non-scouring velocity, v,

v  C 1 y n , (38)
where C 1  0.84; n  0.64; and y  depth of flow.
Kennedy was followed by Lacey, Inglis, and Blench who
developed equations for channel slope and width.
Lacey 42,21 introduced the equations

vfR=117. (39)

0.93 mm.

0.47 mm.

0.19 mm.sand

0.27 mm.

.0001

.001

.01

.1

1

10

100

1000

.2 .4 .6 .8 1.0 2 4 610 20 40 60 80
T

T


FIGURE 11 Bed material transport function (after Bishop et al.).

C019_001_r03.indd 1074C019_001_r03.indd 1074 11/18/2005 11:06:01 AM11/18/2005 11:06:01 AM

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