Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Church, M., and A. Zimmermann (2007), Form and stability of step-pool channels: Research progress, Water Resour. Res., 43, W03415, doi:10.1029/2006WR005037.
Organization UBC
URL http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2006WR005037/abstract
Abstract/Description or Keywords Research examining the hydraulics, morphology, and stability of step-pool mountain streams has blossomed in the last decade, resulting in more than a dozen dissertations. These, along with other research projects, have transformed our understanding of step-pool channels. Contributions have been made toward understanding depositional step formation and destruction, scour downstream of steps, step-pool hydraulics, and the effect of sediment transport on step stability. We propose that depositional steps exist in a jammed state whereby the boulders are structurally arranged within the channel and thereby stabilize it. Once a step has formed, a scour pool with a characteristic length and depth develops downstream, creating a zone where additional steps are unlikely to occur. Downstream of the scour hole, steps are more likely to occur as the high energy associated with the plunge pool has dissipated. Data suggest that the presence of cobbles or boulders limits pool scour as well as the degree to which well-defined, channel-spanning step-pools form. We propose a state-space for step-pools in which conditions for a step to form include (1) the ratio between width and boulder diameter (the jamming ratio), (2) the ratio between applied shear stress and the stress needed to mobilize the bed (relative Shields number), and (3) the ratio between bed material supply and discharge (bed sediment concentration). Available data suggest this model is plausible. Emerging critical research questions are discussed.
Information Type article
Regional Watershed Province
Sub-watershed if known
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Michael Church
Contact Email [email protected]