Channel Processes KQ1
Water does not come into or leave planet earth. Water is continuously transferred between the atmosphere and the oceans. This is known as the global hydrological cycle. This system is a closed system. There are no inputs or outputs.
Drainage basins are local open systems. A drainage basin is an area of land drained by a river and its tributaries (river system). It includes water found in the water table and surface run-off. There is an imaginary line separating drainage basins called a watershed. Usually, this is a ridge of high land. Any precipitation that falls on the other side of the watershed will flow into a river in the adjacent river basin.
The drainage basin hydrological cycle may be defined as a single river basin bounded by its own watershed and the sea. The drainage basin hydrological cycle is an open system. This means it has inputs and outputs. Energy from the sun and precipitation (including rain and snow) enter the system and water leaves it. The channel constantly adjusts to inputs of sediment and water to enable the river to transfer these inputs as a result of erosion, transportation and deposition.
INPUTS: gravity, precipitation (through rain, snow, hail, dew and ice) frost, temperature insolation(incoming solar radiation from the sun), geology (e.g. rock type -porous/impermeable and rock structure- jointing) and human influences (buildings, roads etc)
THROUGHPUTS/ FLOWS: rain splash, surface runoff, groundwater flow, subsurface flow, infiltration, percolation, precipitation.
STORES: trees, reservoirs, oceans, ground water storage (aquifers), lakes, interception, condensation and storage as ice and snow.
OUTPUTS: Outputs move moisture out of the drainage basin and include evaporation and transpiration from vegetation (together known as evapotranspiration), run-off into the sea and percolation of water to underlying rock strata into underground stores.radiation, channel flow and sediment in river, mass movements, gullies (formed by runoff) and surface wash and wind action spread a thin mantle over gentle slopes.