Your Paper should be three to four text-written pages, plus one page of endnotes and one page that shows a map of the river basin - Management
Your Paper should be three to four text-written pages, plus one page of endnotes and one page that shows a map of the river basin. You may have only a few endnotes, two or three. Your paper should be typed and double-spaced (1.5). The final page (not counted as part of the four pages) should have “endnotes”. The citations of sources used in your paper. The one source you must use is your textbook. See the required reading below.
Physical Geography 100 -- River Basin Essay – Fall 2019
(3-4 page paper worth 50 Points)
Submit your essay through our class page on Canvas. The deadline is Friday, December 13th, at 11:59
p.m.; however, you may submit your Paper on River Basins any time between Sunday, December 8
th
through Friday, December 13th at ll:59 p.m. Absolutely no submissions will be accepted after
Friday, December 13
th
. Email submissions will not be accepted.
I would encourage you to not wait until 11:50 p.m. on December 13 to submit your River Basin Essay in
case you have questions or issues. I will not be checking my email after Friday, December 13
th
after 10:00
p.m., and I will not be able to address any problems after that time. It is your responsibility to submit
your essay in a timely manner. Again, I strongly suggest that you do not wait until the last minute.
Style and Format of Your Paper:
Your Paper should be three to four text-written pages, plus one page of endnotes and one page
that shows a map of the river basin. You may have only a few endnotes, two or three. Your paper
should be typed and double-spaced (1.5).
The final page (not counted as part of the four pages) should have “endnotes”. The citations of
sources used in your paper. The one source you must use is your textbook. See the required
reading below.
You must read the following pages of Christopherson textbook as background information: Pages 409-
415, pages 433-435. You may also use the USGS (United Stated Geologic Survey) for more information:
https://www.usgs.gov/special-topic/water-science-school/science/rivers-streams-and-creeks?qt-
science_center_objects=0#qt-science_center_objects. You may refer to an additional source of your choice, but
this is not required. This is not a major research paper. The purpose is to reflect on the issues surrounding
a major River Basin, one that is important to you. You may choose any major global river.
In a comprehensive discussion of your selected River Basin, address the following issues Your answers
should be in your own words, paragraph format with complete sentences, not a listing or bullet format.
Address and expand on these issues in your paper.
1.) Introduction:
a. Explain why you selected this river and what it means to you. Have you been “on” the river,
rafted in the river, fished in the river, swam in the river . . . ?
b. Description of the River Basin (including area impacted by its drainage). What is its source
and its mouth (delta)? Provide characteristics of length and volume.
2.) What affects the supply of water in the River? Discuss natural disasters such as flooding, but also
the impact of human activities. Discuss both positive and negative human impacts.
3.) How is the river used and by whom?
4.) What political and economic forces do you think are at play in planning for the river and its
dependent region? Who are the stakeholders (interested parties) and why are they stakeholders?
Stakeholders may be numerous - - residents, indigenous populations, politicians, urban officials.
5.) What are the particular hazards the human population will face with this river system in the 21
st
century? Provide details and describe.
6.) Discuss any cultural, religious, spiritual, sacred and mystical aspects to the river you have chosen.
https://www.usgs.gov/special-topic/water-science-school/science/rivers-streams-and-creeks?qt-science_center_objects=0#qt-science_center_objects
https://www.usgs.gov/special-topic/water-science-school/science/rivers-streams-and-creeks?qt-science_center_objects=0#qt-science_center_objects
PLAGIARISM
Do not plagiarize. If you use exact words of someone, you must use quotation marks. Cite your source directly after a
direct quote, an idea, or statistics. Place the author and year of publication in parenthesis.
ENDNOTES:
An example of the format of an endnote is below. You must read the selections in your Christopherson text. Place the
endnotes in alphabetical order. You should have no more than four or five endnotes.
Christopherson, R.W., and Birkeland, G.H., 2018, Geosystems: An Introduction to Physical Geography, tenth edition,
Hoboken, NJ: Pearson.
Email me if you have questions about this assignment. Again, do not wait until the last minute. If you have difficulty,
finding sources let me know. Always feel free to contact me.
Chapter 14 River Systems 433
because offshore currents remove sediment as quickly as
it is deposited.
Floods
Despite our historical knowledge of flood events and
their effects, floodplains continue to be important sites
of human activity and settlement. These activities place
lives and property at risk during floods, especially in
less-developed regions of the world. Bangladesh is per-
haps the most persistent example: It is one of the most
densely populated countries on Earth, and more than
three-fourths of its land area is a floodplain and delta
complex—an area the size of Alabama. The historic
floods of 1988 and 1998 inundated 60% and 75%,
respectively, of the country’s land area, causing extensive
crop losses and thousands of fatalities.
A f lood is defined as a high water flow that passes
over the natural bank along any portion of a stream.
As discussed earlier, floods in a drainage basin are
strongly connected to precipitation and snowmelt,
which are, in turn, connected to weather patterns (Fig-
ure 14.32). Floods can result from periods of prolonged
rainfall over a broad region, from intense rainfall as-
sociated with short-lived thunderstorms, from rapid
melting of the snowpack, or from rain-on-snow events
that accelerate snowpack melting. Floods vary in mag-
nitude and frequency, and their effects depend on
many factors.
Flood Probability
Maintaining extensive historical records of discharge
during precipitation events is critical for predicting the
behavior of present streams under similar conditions.
The U.S. Geological Survey has detailed records of stream
discharge at stream-gaging stations since the 1900s, with
Recurrence
Interval, in
Years
Probability of
occurrence in
a Given Year
Percent Chance
of occurrence
in a Given Year
10 1 in 10 10
50 1 in 50 2
100 1 in 100 1
500 1 in 500 0.20
1000 1 in 1000 0.10
table 14.2 Recurrence Interval and Probability
of Occurrence for Flood Discharges
the most consistent data collected since the 1940s. These
relatively short-term historical data form the basis for
flood probability estimates.
Recurrence Interval Scientists rate flood discharges
statistically according to the recurrence interval (or
return interval), the estimated time interval between peak
discharges of similar size. For example, based on dis-
charge data for a particular stream, a “100-year flood” on
that stream has a recurrence interval of 100 years and a
1% chance of occurring in any given year (Table 14.2).
The use of historical data works well where available;
however, urbanization and dam construction can change
the magnitude and frequency of flood events on a stream
or in a watershed.
These statistical estimates are probabilities that
events will occur randomly during a specified period;
they do not mean that events will occur regularly during
that time period. For example, several centuries might
pass without a 100-year flood, or a 100-year level of
flooding could occur twice in one century.
Annual Exceedance Probability Another method
for describing floods and precipitation events uses the
annual exceedance probability (AEP) to represent the
statistical likelihood of occurrence. By this measure, a
100-year flood has a 1% AEP.
WoRkitOut 14.4
Recurrence of Rainfall and Flooding
News reports about the 2016 West Virginia flooding pictured in
Everyday Geosystems (Figure 14.1) described it as being caused
by a “thousand-year precipitation event.”
1. What is the percent chance of a rainfall event of this magni-
tude occurring in any given year?
2. Could a precipitation event of that magnitude occur again
in your lifetime?
3. Does a 1000-year rain event produce a 1000-year flood
event? Explain.
▲ Figure 14.32 Flooding from Hurricane Matthew in 2016.
Rising floodwater caused by heavy rainfall from Hurricane Matthew
inundated portions of North Carolina in October 2016; shown here is
the town of Rocky Mount, flooded by the Tar River. [Thomas Babb/The
News & Observer via AP.]
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 433 24/11/16 12:10 PM
434 Geosystems
Floodplain Risk
The flood recurrence interval is useful for floodplain
management and hazard assessment. A 10-year flood in-
dicates a moderate threat to a floodplain. A 50-year or
100-year flood is of greater consequence, but it is also
less likely to occur in a given year.
Scientists and developers define and map flood-
plains using flood recurrence intervals, for example, by
delineating the “100-year floodplain.” Using these maps,
scientists and engineers can develop the most effective
flood-management strategy. Restrictive zoning using
these floodplain designations helps determine degrees of
risk across the floodplain and can help avoid potential
flood damage. However, restrictive zoning based on flood
hazard mapping is not always enforced.
Flood Protection
In the United States, floods cause an average of about $6
billion in annual losses. The catastrophic floods along
the Mississippi River and its tributaries in 1993 and 2011
produced damage that exceeded $30 billion in each oc-
currence. Flood protection, when in place, generally
takes the form of dams (discussed in Chapter 8) and arti-
ficial levee construction along river channels.
Usually, the term levee connotes an element of
human construction, and these engineered features are
common across the United States and throughout the
world. Artificial levees are earthen embankments, often
built on top of natural levees. They run parallel to the
channel (rather than across it, like a dam) and increase
the capacity in the channel by adding to the height of the
banks (Figure 14.33). For efficient use of time and mate-
rials, channels are often straightened during levee con-
struction. Levees are intended to hold floods within the
channel, but not prevent them completely. Eventually,
given severe enough conditions, an artificial levee will
be overtopped or damaged in a flood. When overtopping
(known as levee breaching) or levee failure occurs, exten-
sive flood damage and erosion can result downstream.
(b) Sheep graze on the slopes of an artificial levee along the
Sacramento River in California. Note that the agricultural fields are
lower in elevation than the river, caused by subsidence of the
Sacramento River delta.
(a) A natural levee.
Natural levee
(c) The MIssissippi River flows over part of an
intentional breach in the Bird's Point levee in Missouri
in 2011. During the winter floods of early 2016, 11
levees were breached nearby as the Mississippi
crested to near-record levels in the U.S. Midwest.
georeport 14.2 America’s levees
By several estimates, over 100,000 miles of artificial levees exist along rivers and streams in the United States, the vast majority of them
privately owned. The U.S. population living in areas protected by levees is estimated to be in the tens of millions; some major urban areas with
levee systems are New Orleans, Sacramento, Dallas–Fort Worth, St. Louis, and Washington, D.C. In fact, over 30 major cities in America are lo-
cated on floodplains. Currently, no national policy exists concerning the safety of levees (see http://www.leveesafety.org/docs/NCLS-Recom-
mendation-Report_012009_DRAFT.pdf).
▲Figure 14.33 Natural and artificial levees. [(b) California Department of Water Resources. (c) Scott Olsen/Getty Images News.]
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 434 24/11/16 12:11 PM
http://www.leveesafety.org/docs/NCLS-Recom-mendation-Report_012009_DRAFT.pdf
http://www.leveesafety.org/docs/NCLS-Recom-mendation-Report_012009_DRAFT.pdf
In 2011, Americans
spent $42 million on
fishing-related activities.
Streams in Montana,
Missouri, Michigan,
Utah, and Wisconsin are
of high enough quality
that they are designated
“blue ribbon fisheries”
based on sustainability
criteria such as water
quality and quantity,
accessibility, and the
specific species present.
[Karl Weatherly/Getty
Images.]
After days of heavy rain,
the Seine River reached its
highest flood stage in over
30 years in Paris, France,
in June 2016. High water
closed rail lines, the Metro
system, numerous tourist
attractions, and all boat
traffic through the city.
[Joel Saget/AFP/Getty Images.]
A proposed series of dams on the free-flowing Nu/Salween River system in
Southeast Asia would relocate some 60,000 people in China. The dams would
also block the movement of sediment that replenishes farmlands along the river’s
floodplain and delta. [Bradley Mayhew/Getty Images.]
A Texas Department of Safety boat patrols the U.S.–Mexico border along the
Rio Grande in Texas for drug trafficking and human smuggling activities. The
border follows the center of the river and was surveyed and permanently
established to avoid disputes related to channel changes. [Polaris/Newscom.]
14a
14b
14d
14c
RIVER SYSTEMS IMPACT HUMANS
• Humans use rivers for recreation and have farmed fertile
floodplain soils for centuries.
• Flooding affects human settlements on floodplains and deltas.
HUMANS IMPACT RIVER SYSTEMS
• Dams and diversions alter river flows and sediment loads, affecting
river ecosystems and habitat. River restoration efforts include dam
removal to restore ecosystems and threatened species.
• Urbanization, deforestation, and other human activities in water-
sheds alter runoff, peak flows, and sediment loads in streams.
• Levee construction affects floodplain ecosystems; levee failures
cause destructive flooding.
ISSUES FOR THE 21ST CENTURY
• Increasing population will intensify human settlement on floodplains and deltas
worldwide, especially in developing countries, making more people vulnerable to
flood impacts.
• Stream restoration will continue, including dam decommissioning and removal, flow
restoration, vegetation reestablishment, and restoration of stream geomorphology.
• Global climate change may intensify storm systems, including hurricanes, increasing
runoff and flooding in affected regions. Rising sea level will make delta areas more
vulnerable to flooding.
QUESTIONS TO CONSIDER
1. How do human activities affect river
systems? Try to think of both negative
and positive impacts.
2. What hazards will human populations
on floodplains and deltas face during
the 21st century?
TheHumandenominator 14 Rivers, Floodplains, and Deltas
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 435 24/11/16 12:11 PM
M
isso
uri R
.
Mississip
p
i R
.
Oh
io
R.
Gulf of Mexico
M
isso
uri R
.
Mississip
p
i R
.
Oh
io
R.
0
250 500 KILOMETERS0
250 500 MILES0
250 500 KILOMETERS0
250 500 MILES
▲Figure GN 14.1 Map of the Mississippi River basin.
409
GEOSYSTEMSnow
The Disappearing Delta Before modern engineering of the chan-
nel, the Mississippi River carried over 400 million metric tons of sedi-
ment annually to its mouth. River deposits built from this sediment
now underlie most of coastal Louisiana. Today, the flow carries less
than half its previous sediment load. This decline, combined with
land subsidence and sea-level rise, means that the delta region is
shrinking in size each year.
The tremendous weight of sediment deposition at the Mississip-
pi’s mouth has caused the entire delta region to lower as sediments
become compacted, a process that is worsened by human activities
such as oil and gas extraction. In the past, additions of sediment bal-
anced this subsidence, allowing the delta to build. With the onset
of human activities such as upstream dam construction, the delta is
now subsiding without sediment replenishment.
Compounding the problem is the maze of excavated canals
through the delta for shipping and oil and gas exploration. As the
land surface sinks, these canals allow seawater to flow inland,
changing the salinity of inland waters. Freshwater wetlands whose
roots help stabilize the land surface during floods are now declining.
This makes the delta more vulnerable to flooding from hurricane
storm surge, another factor hastening the delta’s demise.
Finally, sea-level rise threatens coastal land and wetlands, most
of which are less than 1 m (3.2 ft) above sea level. With continued
local sea-level rise, lands not protected by levee embankments and
other structures that prevent flooding will con-
tinue to submerge.
In this chapter, we examine the natural pro-
cesses by which rivers erode, transport, and de-
posit sediment, forming landforms such as deltas.
1. Why are engineers trying to keep the
Mississippi River in its present channel?
2. What three factors are causing the
Mississippi delta to disappear?
Changes on the
Mississippi River Delta
T
he immense Mississippi River basin
drains 41% of the continental United
States (Figure GN 14.1). From its head-
waters in Lake Itasca, Minnesota, the Missis-
sippi’s main stem flows southward, collecting
water and sediment over hundreds of miles.
As the river nears the Gulf of Mexico, the
flow energy diminishes and the river depos-
its its sediment load. This area of deposition
forms the delta, the low-lying plain at the
river’s end.
Like most rivers, the Mississippi continu-
ously changes its channel, seeking the short-
est and most efficient course to the ocean.
In southern Louisiana, the Mississippi’s chan-
nel has—over thousands of years—shifted
course across an area encompassing thou-
sands of square miles. Throughout this time
span, floods caused the river to abandon pre-
vious channels and carve new ones. The Mis-
sissippi River attained its present position about 500 years ago and
began building the delta we see today (Figure GN 14.2).
Engineering the River Channel Since about 1950, engineers have
worked to keep the Mississippi River in its present channel, a feat
accomplished by dams, floodgates, and artificial levees (earthen
embankments designed to prevent channel overflow). The U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers built the Old River Control Structure in
1963 to block the Mississippi River from shifting westward toward
the Atchafalaya River, which takes a steeper, shorter route to the
Gulf of Mexico. Such a shift would cause the river to bypass two
major U.S. ports, Baton Rouge and New Orleans, with negative eco-
nomic consequences. Despite such measures, the Atchafalaya delta
is growing even as the rest of the Mississippi’s delta disappears.
0
15 30 KILOMETERS0
15 30 MILES
Mississippi
River
delta
Old River Control
Structure
Atchafalaya River
delta
Atchafalaya
River
Gulf of Mexico
M
is
s
is
s
ip
p
i R
i v e r
▲Figure GN 14.2 Mississippi River landscape, southern Louisiana. Inset photo shows
the Old River Control Auxilliary Structure. NASA/USGS; Inset photo by Bobbé Christopherson.
Mobile
Field Trip
https://goo.gl/bpcQAU
Mississippi River
Delta
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 409 06/12/16 1:19 AM
https://goo.gl/bpcQAU
410 Geosystems
Earth’s rivers and waterways form vast arterial net-works that drain the continents. Even though this volume is only 0.003% of all freshwater, the work per-
formed by this energetic flow makes it an important natural
agent of landmass denudation. Rivers shape the landscape
by removing the products of weathering, mass movement,
and erosion and transporting them downstream.
Remember from Chapter 8 that hydrology is the sci-
ence of water at and below Earth’s surface. Processes that
are related expressly to streams and rivers are termed
fluvial (from the Latin fluvius, meaning “river”). The
terms river and stream share some overlap in usage. Spe-
cifically, the term river is applied to the trunk or main
stream of the network of tributaries forming a river sys-
tem. Stream is a more general term for water flowing in
a channel and is not necessarily related to size. Fluvial
systems, like all natural systems, have characteristic pro-
cesses and produce recognizable landforms.
The ongoing interaction between erosion, transpor-
tation, and deposition in a river system produces fluvial
landscapes. Erosion in fluvial systems is the process
by which water dislodges, dissolves, or removes weath-
ered surface material. This material is then transported
to new locations, where it is laid down in the process
of deposition. Running water is an important erosional
force; in fact, in desert landscapes it is the most signifi-
cant agent of erosion even though precipitation events
are infrequent. We discuss fluvial processes in arid land-
scapes in Chapter 15.
Rivers also serve society in many ways. They provide
us with essential water supplies; dilute, and transport
wastes; provide critical cooling water for industry; and
form critical transportation networks. Throughout his-
tory, civilizations have settled along rivers to farm the fer-
tile soils formed by river deposits. These areas continue to
be important sites of human activity and settlement, plac-
ing lives and property at risk during floods (Figure 14.1).
Drainage Basins
Streams, which come together to form river systems, lie
within drainage basins, the portions of landscape from
which they receive their water. Every stream has its own
drainage basin, or watershed, ranging in size from tiny
to vast. A major drainage basin system is made up of
many smaller drainage basins, each of which gathers and
delivers its runoff and sediment to a larger basin, even-
tually concentrating the volume into the main stream.
Figure 14.2 illustrates the drainage basin of the Amazon
River, from headwaters to the river’s mouth (where the
river meets the ocean). The Amazon carries millions of
tons of sediment through the drainage basin, which is as
large as the Australian continent.
Drainage Divides
In any drainage basin, water initially moves downslope
as overland flow, which takes two forms: It can move as
A flooding river carries not only water but also sediment and debris. When a river overflows its banks into human develop-
ments, the flow can pick up vehicles and knock houses off their
foundations. As the floodwaters recede, debris such as trees come
to rest and sediment is deposited over most surfaces, including the
interiors of houses. In June 2016, flooding in West Virginia caused
extensive damage, 23 fatalities, and left residents cleaning up a land-
scape of mud.
everydaygeosystems
What kind of damage occurs during a river flood?
◀Figure 14.1 The aftermath
of flooding along the Elk
River, Clendenin, West
Virginia, in June 2016.
[Ty Wright/Getty Images.]
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 410 24/11/16 12:10 PM
Chapter 14 River Systems 411
0
200 400 KILOMETERS0
200 400 MILES
Amazon River
basin
Mouth of
Amazon River
Amazon River
PACIFIC
OCEAN
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
A
n
d
e
s
M
o
u
n
t a
i n
s
Elevation in m (ft)
250
(820)
0
(0)
750
(2460)
1500
(4920)
3000
(9840)
4500
(14,760)
▲Figure 14.2 Amazon River drainage basin and mouth. [NASA SRTM image by Jesse Allen, University of Maryland, Global Land
Cover Facility; stream data World Wildlife Fund, HydroSHEDS project (see http:// hydrosheds.cr.usgs.gov/).]
Interfluves
Drainage divide
Drainage basin
Drainage basin
Drainage divide
Drainage divide
Drainage divide
Valley
Valley
Rill
Gully
Shee
tflow
▶Figure 14.3 Drainage divides. A drainage
divide separates drainage basins.
georeport 14.1 Locating the source of the Amazon
Over the past several centuries, scientists and explorers have designated at least six different sources as the true beginning of the Ama-
zon River. In the 1970s, southwest Peru’s Apurímac River was deemed the longest tributary stream, and in 2000, Lake Ticlla Cocha on the slopes of
Mount Mismi was named as the Apurimac's source. Then in 2014, a team of kayakers used GPS tracking data and satellite images to determine that
the Mantaro River, also in southwest Peru, is the longest upstream extension of the Amazon River. However, the new claim remains under debate.
sheetflow, a thin film spread over the
ground surface, and it can concentrate
in rills, small-scale grooves in the land-
scape made by the downslope move-
ment of water. Rills may develop into
deeper gullies and then into stream
channels leading to the valley floor.
The high ground that separates
one valley from another and directs
sheetflow is called an interfluve
(Figure 14.3). Ridges act as drainage
divides that define the catchment, or
water-receiving, area of every drain-
age basin; such ridges are the dividing
lines that control into which basin the
surface runoff drains.
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 411 24/11/16 12:10 PM
http://hydrosheds.cr.usgs.gov/).]
412 Geosystems
A special class of drainage divides, continental
divides, separate drainage basins that empty into dif-
ferent bodies of water surrounding a continent (Figure
14.4). For North America, these bodies are the Pacific
Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic Ocean, Hudson
Bay, and the Arctic Ocean. These divides form water-
resource regions and provide a spatial framework for
water-management planning. In North America, the con-
tinental divide separating the Pacific and Gulf/Atlantic
basins runs the length of the Rocky Mountains, reaching
its highest point in Colorado at the summit of Gray’s Peak
at 4352 m (14,278 ft) elevation (Figure 14.5).
As discussed in Geosystems Now, the great
Mississippi–Missouri–Ohio River system drains 41% of
the continental United States. Within this basin, rain-
fall in northern Pennsylvania feeds hundreds of small
streams that flow into the Allegheny River. At the same
time, rainfall in western Pennsylvania feeds hundreds of
streams that flow into the Monongahela River. The two
rivers then join at Pittsburgh to form the
Ohio River. The Ohio connects with the Mis-
sissippi River, which eventually flows to the
Gulf of Mexico. Each contributing tributary,
large or small, adds its discharge and sedi-
ment load to the larger river. In our example,
sediment weathered and eroded in Pennsyl-
vania is transported thousands of kilometers
and accumulates on the floor of the Gulf
of Mexico, where it forms the Mississippi
River delta.
Internal Drainage
The ultimate outlet for most drainage ba-
sins is the ocean. In some regions, however,
stream drainage does not reach the ocean.
Instead, the water leaves the drainage basin
by means of evaporation or subsurface gravi-
tational flow. Such basins are described as
having internal drainage. Regions of inter-
nal drainage occur in Asia, Africa, Australia,
Mexico, and the western United States in
Nevada and Utah (discussed in Chapter 15).
An example within this region is the Hum-
boldt River, which flows westward across
Nevada and eventually disappears into the
Humboldt Sink as a result of evaporation
and seepage losses to groundwater. The area
surrounding Utah’s Great Salt Lake, out-
let for many streams draining the Wasatch
Mountains, also exemplifies internal drain-
age, since its only outlet is evaporation. In-
ternal drainage is also a characteristic of the
Dead Sea region in the Middle East and the
region around the Aral Sea and Caspian Sea
in Asia (Figure 14.6).
Drainage Basins as Open Systems
Drainage basins are open systems. Inputs include pre-
cipitation and the minerals and rocks of the regional
geology. Energy and materials are redistributed as the
stream constantly adjusts to its landscape. System out-
puts of water and sediment disperse through the mouth
of the stream or river into a lake, another stream or river,
or the ocean.
Change that occurs in any portion of a drainage basin
can affect the entire system. For example, the building
of a dam not only affects the immediate stream envi-
ronment around the structure, but can also change the
movement of water and sediment for hundreds of miles
downstream. Natural processes such as floods can also
push river systems to thresholds, where banks collapse
or channels change course. Throughout changing condi-
tions, a river system constantly strives for equilibrium
among the interacting variables of discharge, chan-
nel steepness, channel shape, and sediment load, all of
which are discussed in the chapter ahead.
(a) Loveland Pass, Colorado, lies along the continental divide
between the Pacific and Gulf/Atlantic drainage basins.
(b) A backpacker approaches the continental divide at Cutbank
Pass, Glacier National Park, Montana.
▲Figure 14.4 The U.S. Continental Divide, Colorado and Montana. [(a) Erika
Nusser/Alamy. (b) Design Pics Inc./Alamy.]
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 412 24/11/16 12:10 PM
Chapter 14 River Systems 413
No
rth
A
tla
nti
c
dr
ain
ag
e
Pacific
drainage
Pacific
drainage
Arctic
drainage
Arctic
drainage
Hudson Bay
drainage
Gulf/Atlantic
drainage
Atlantic
drainage
6
0
°N170°E
180°
170°W
160°W
150°W
140°W
110°W 90°W
60°W
50°W
40°W
30°W
20°W
70°E
60
°N
50
°N
40
°N
30°
N
20°N
20°N
30°N
40°N
50°N
70°N
80°N
120°W130°W 80°W
Ar
cti
c
Ci
rcl
e
Tropic of Cancer
Bering
Sea
Gulf of
Alaska
Labrador
Sea
Hudson
Bay
Baffin Bay
Beaufort
Sea
Gulf of
Mexico
ARCTIC OCEAN
ATLANTIC
OCEAN
ARCTIC OCEAN
PACIFIC
OCEAN
C
A
L
IF
O
R
N
I A
NELSON
LABRADOR–NEWFOUNDLAN
D
TEN
NE
SS
EE
L
O
W
E
R
M
IS
S
IS
S
IP
P
I
U
PP
ER
C
OL
OR
AD
OInternal
Drainage
GREAT BASIN
COLUMBIA
FRASER
PACIFIC
COASTAL
YUKON
MACKENZIE
PEACE–
ATHABASCA
KEEWATIN
CHURCHILL
SASKATCHEWAN
ASSINIBOINE–
RED
NORTHERN
QUEBEC
GREAT
LAKES
ST.
LAWRENCE
NORTH SLOPE–
GASPÉ
MARITIME
COASTAL
NORTH
ATLANTIC
UPPER
MISSISSIPPI
MISSOURI
OHIO
SOUTH
ATLANTIC–
GULF
ARKANSAS–WHITE–RED
TEXAS–GULFRIO
GRANDE
LOWER
COLORADO
ARCTIC COAST AND ISLANDS
0
250 500 KILOMETERS0
250 500 MILES
DRAINAGE BASIN
DISCHARGE
CANADA:
Hudson Bay 682,000 (553)
Atlantic 670,000 (544)
Pacific 602,000 (488)
Arctic 440,000 (356)
Gulf of Mexico 105 (0.9)
UNITED STATES:
Gulf/Atlantic 718 (886,000)
Pacific 334 (412,000)
Atlantic 293 (361,000)
millions acre-feet per year
(millions m3 per year)
millions m3 per year
(millions acre-feet per year)
Continental divides
◀Figure 14.5 Drainage
basins and continental
divides, North America.
Continental divides (red
lines) separate the major
drainage basins that empty
through the United States
into the Pacific Ocean,
Atlantic Ocean, and Gulf
of Mexico, and to the
north, through Canada into
Hudson Bay and the Arctic
Ocean. Subdividing these
major drainage basins are
major river basins. [After U.S.
Geological Survey; The National
Atlas of Canada, 1985,
“Energy, Mines, and Resources
Canada”; and Environment
Canada, Currents of Change—
Inquiry on Federal Water
Policy—Final Report 1986.]
◀Figure 14.6
Utah’s Great Salt
Lake, part of an
interior drainage
system. [Delphotos/
Alamy.]
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 413 24/11/16 12:10 PM
414 Geosystems
number and length of channels in a given area reflect the
landscape’s regional geology and topography. For exam-
ple, landscapes with underlying materials that are easily
erodible will have a higher drainage density than land-
scapes of more resistant rock.
The drainage pattern is the arrangement of channels
in an area. Distinctive patterns can develop based on a
combination of factors, including
• regional topography and slope inclination,
• variations in rock resistance,
• climate and hydrology, and
• structural controls imposed by the underlying rocks.
Consequently, the drainage pattern of any land area on
Earth is a remarkable visual summary of every geologic
and climatic characteristic of that region.
A familiar pattern is dendritic drainage (Figure
14.7a), a treelike pattern (from the Greek word dendron,
meaning “tree”) similar to that of many natural systems,
such as capillaries in the human circulatory system or
the veins in tree leaves. Energy expenditure in the mov-
ing of water and sediment through this drainage system is
efficient because the total length of the branches is mini-
mized. In landscapes with steep slopes, parallel drainage
may occur (Figure 14.7b). In some landscapes, drainage
patterns alter their characteristics abruptly in response to
slope steepness or rock structure (Figure 14.7c).
Other drainage patterns are closely tied to geo-
logic structure. Around a volcanic mountain or uplifted
dome, a radial drainage pattern results when streams
flow off a central large peak. New Zealand’s Mount Rua-
pehu, an active volcano on the North Island, shows such
a radial drainage pattern (Figure 14.8). In a faulted and
(a) Note the drainage channels flowing off the central peak of Mount Ruapehu,
which last erupted in 2007.
(b) Radial drainage pattern.
◀Figure 14.8 Radial drainage on Mount
Ruapehu, North Island, New Zealand. This
false-color image of the composite vocano shows
vegetation as red, the crater lake as light blue,
and rocks as brown. [NASA.]
Drainage Patterns
A primary feature of any drainage basin is its drainage
density, determined by dividing the total length of all
stream channels in the basin by the area of the basin. The
(a) Dendritic drainage pattern.
(c) Dendritic and parallel drainage in response to local geology and
relief in central Montana.
(b) Parallel drainage pattern.
Drainage divide
▲Figure 14.7 Dendritic and parallel drainage patterns. [Bobbé
Christopherson.]
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 414 24/11/16 12:10 PM
Chapter 14 River Systems 415
(a) A rectangular stream pattern develops in areas with
jointed bedrock.
(b) A trellis stream pattern develops in areas where the geologic structure
is a mix of weak and resistant bedrock (such as in folded landscapes).
Ridges of
resistant rock
Valleys cut in
less-resistant rock
▲Figure 14.9 Drainage patterns controlled by geologic structure: rectangular and trellis.
S
u
s
q
u
e
h
a
n
n
a
R
iv
e
r
As erosion exposes underlying
rock with a different structure,
the river cuts through ridges
of resistant rock rather than
flowing around them.
Water gap
in the eastern United States and in the folded land-
scapes of south-central Utah. Some landscapes display
a deranged pattern with no clear geometry and no true
stream valley. Examples include the glaciated shield re-
gions of Canada, northern Europe, and some parts of the
U.S. upper Midwest.
Occasionally, drainage patterns occur that seem to
be in conflict with the landscape through which they
flow. For example, a stream may initially develop a
channel in horizontal strata deposited on top of up-
lifted, folded structures. As the stream erodes into the
older folded rock layers, it keeps the original course,
downcutting into the rock in a pattern contrary to the
structure of the older layers. Such a stream is a super-
posed stream, in which a preexisting channel pattern
has been imposed upon older underlying rock struc-
tures (Figure 14.10). For example, Wills Creek, presently
cutting a water gap through Haystack Mountain at Cum-
berland, Maryland, is a superposed stream. A water gap
is a notch or opening cut by a river through a mountain
range and is often an indication that the river is older
than the landscape.
▲Figure 14.10 The Susquehanna River in Pennsylvania, a
superposed stream. The Susquehanna River established its course
on relatively uniform rock strata that covered more complex geologic
structure below. Over time, as the landscape eroded, the river
“superposed” its course onto the older structure by cutting through
the resistant strata. [Landsat-7, NASA.]
WoRkitOut 14.1
Stream Drainage Patterns
Choose among dendritic, parallel, radial, rectangular, trellis, and
deranged drainage patterns to answer the following questions.
1. Which drainage pattern often occurs in a landscape with a
central mountain peak?
2. Which pattern is prominent in the Amazon River basin in
Figure 14.2?
3. Which pattern often occurs in landscapes of jointed
bedrock?
4. Which pattern occurs in landscapes of folded rock, such as
in southern Utah?
5. Which pattern might be found in the Canadian Shield land-
scape shown in Figure 12.2?
jointed landscape, a rectangular pattern (Figure 14.9a)
directs stream courses in patterns of right-angle turns.
In dipping or folded topography, the trellis drainage
pattern develops, influenced by folded rock structures
that vary in resistance to erosion (Figure 14.9b). Paral-
lel structures direct the principal streams, while smaller
dendritic tributary streams are at work on nearby
slopes, joining the main streams at right angles, as in
a plant trellis. Such drainage is seen in the nearly par-
allel mountain folds of the Ridge and Valley Province
M14_CHRI7119_10_SE_C14.indd 415 24/11/16 12:10 PM
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