Rivers transport water and
sediment from the land to
the sea. Main purpose of
eroding land
Upper Course
Steep-sided valleys/gradients
Water travels quite slowly because of
friction from a rough, stony river bed
Zig-zag,
interlocking spurs
Frequent rapids and waterfalls
Clear water with
little sediment
Waterfalls- retreat because
over time erosion and
weathering lead the waterfall
face to move upstream as
worn away
1. Undercutting by hydraulic action and abrasion. 2. Gravity leads to the rocks
falling 3. Boulders are moved around to carve out a plunge pool through
abrasion. 4. Waterfall retreats upstream over time 5. Creates a steep-sided
valley or even a gorge
Steep valley sides are weathered by
processes such as frost weathering/ Mass
movement such as rockfall and sliding takes
this material to the stream where it forms
part of a load
Streams cut down vertically. Bed is strewn with rocks and
debris which are moved only after storms. Material wears down
bed and wandering course of the river creates interlocking
spurs
Middle Course
Meanders- flatter floored valley,
Gradient reduced.
Meanders- formed when the faster flowing water on the outside of the bend
either erodes whilst on the inside of the bend/deposition (river loosing
energy and dropping everything) meanders become more obvious/oxbow
lakes form when the neck of a meander becomes so narrow that it cuts
through it from the flood leaving an old meander there. Deposition soon
blocks up the bend creating a lake that slowly fills up
Channel becomes wider, volume is
increased, tributaries join. Valleys
open out with gentle slopes and
travel is faster!
Lower Course
Meanders developed- Wide
floodplain and ox bow lakes
Channel is deeper and wider,
water full of sediment, Water
travelling faster
Floodplains develop as rivers meander from side to side
pushing back the valley sides to create bluffs. When
meandering, they spread deposits across the valley floor and
widen it as they occasionally erode against the bluff lines.
When rivers floor, new deposits spread out over this material
with the coarse material settling first by the channel. Creates
raised ridges known as levées.
Changes in channel shape and characteristics
Gradient- Increases downstream
Velocity and discharge(speed and
volume)- Both increase downstream,
volume rises due to the small
tributaries joining the main river flow
Chanel characteristics- Channels become wider and
deeper downstream. Channel bed gets smoother
and is less efficient due to the friction becoming less
between the water and the channel sides
Sediment- Eroded by attrition so
it gets smaller downstream, Total
sediment load carried by the river
increases downstream
River land forms and processes
Erosion
Hydraulic action - the force
of water striking the river
bed and forcing air into the
cracks of rocks, breaking it
apart
Abrasion- rocks
dragged by the water
across the bed and
thrown against the
rocks against the
banks and will wear
them away
Attrition- the rocks themselves
will be worn down and broken up
Corrosion - water will
dissolve rocks such as
limestone
Transporting
Traction- rocks and other
particles are dragged
along the river bed
Suspension- small particles are
kept in the water itself until it
stops moving
Solution- Material is
dissolved in water e.g.
salts
Gorges have near vertical slides because there
is little weathering or mass movement, the river
cuts downwards rapidly; weathering and mass
movement operate fast, rivers erode slowly
Why do rivers flood?
The amount of water in the channel
exceeds the channel capacity which
causes it to overflow.
Storm Hydrograph
Rising limb- IF the river water
begins to rise a few hours after the
rainstorm begins.
Peak flow- About 26 hours after the start of the storm
Then the recession
Depend on Physical factors
Long lag times- before peak discharge
Permeable rocks e.g. sandstone
Gentle slopes
Forests- deep soils
Long period of light rain
As it was previously dry, the ground
can absorb the rain
Short lags and peak rapidly
Impermeable rocks-
clay and granite
Steep slopes
Grassland and
thin soil
Short period of heavy rain
Ground saturated due from
previous rain
How people cause flooding
Urbanisation- Increases the area of ground where water is going to
reach the stream by ovreland flow because concrete/tarmac isn't
permeable
Drains- deliver water quicker than soil
If water reaches the river quicker than the peak
discharge is going to be higher
River will flood more often
Deforestation- Increase the amount of rain that reaches the ground.
Reduces evaportation and transpiration, more surface run off into the
river which increases flood risk
Key terms
Confluence- The point where two rivers meet
Tributaries- Smaller river
that flows into a larger one