Drainage basin hydrology and geomorphology
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Define drainage basin.
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All Flashcards in Topic 7.1
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7.1.112 cards
Define drainage basin.
The **area of land drained by a river and its tributaries** — the catchment, bounded by the watershed.
What is the watershed?
The **boundary of a drainage basin** — the high ground separating one basin from the next.
Why is a drainage basin an open system?
Both water and energy **cross its boundary in and out** — rain enters; water leaves as discharge and evapotranspiration.
Name the four parts of the basin system.
**Inputs** (precipitation), **stores**, **flows/transfers**, and **outputs** (evapotranspiration, river discharge).
List the main stores in a drainage basin.
**Interception**, **surface storage**, **soil water**, **groundwater** and **channel storage**.
List the main flows in a drainage basin.
**Infiltration**, **throughflow**, **overland flow**, **percolation** and **base flow**.
What is the water-balance equation?
**Precipitation = evapotranspiration + run-off +/- change in storage.**
Fastest vs slowest flow to the river?
**Overland flow** is fastest; **throughflow** slower; **base flow** (groundwater) slowest.
Why does interception storage stop rising in a storm?
Leaf surfaces have a **storage limit** — once full, no more rain can be intercepted and it passes to the ground.
How does urban development change the system?
Impermeable surfaces cut **infiltration** and storage; drains and bare ground raise **overland flow** — a faster response.
Name the two outputs of a drainage basin.
**Evapotranspiration** (to the air) and **river discharge** (to the sea).
One strength and one weakness of the systems approach?
Strength: it shows **interrelationships** and predicts discharge/land-use effects. Weakness: it is a **simplification** with fuzzy boundaries and patchy data.
7.1.212 cards
Define river discharge.
The **volume of water passing a point per second**, measured in cumecs (m³/s).
What is a storm hydrograph?
A graph showing how a river's **discharge responds to a storm** over time (rainfall bars above, discharge curve below).
Define peak discharge.
The **highest discharge** the river reaches after a storm.
Define lag time.
The gap between **peak rainfall** and **peak discharge** — how fast the basin responds.
Rising limb vs falling limb?
**Rising limb** = the steep climb as run-off reaches the river; **falling (recession) limb** = the gentler fall as it drains.
What is base flow?
The steady background discharge from **groundwater** between storms.
What makes a basin 'flashy'?
A **short lag time + high peak** — impermeable, steep, urban, sparse vegetation; water reaches the river fast.
What makes a basin 'subdued'?
A **long lag time + lower peak** — permeable, gentle, vegetated, rural; water reaches the river slowly.
Why does urbanisation raise discharge?
Impermeable surfaces stop infiltration and drains speed run-off → higher peak, shorter lag time.
How do discharge and hydraulic radius change downstream?
Both **increase** — tributaries add water and the larger, smoother channel is more efficient (Bradshaw model).
Two physical factors that shape a hydrograph?
Geology/permeability and relief/slope (also soil, vegetation, rainfall intensity, basin shape).
What does a top [10] Examine answer need?
Two+ developed factors (peak + lag), an example, a weighing of their relative importance, and a clear judgement.
7.1.312 cards
Name the four river erosion processes.
**Hydraulic action**, **abrasion** (corrasion), **attrition**, and **solution** (corrosion).
Name the four transport processes.
**Traction** (rolling), **saltation** (bouncing), **suspension** (held in flow), **solution** (dissolved).
When does a river deposit its load?
When its **velocity falls** and it loses energy - heaviest load dropped first, finest last.
How does a waterfall form?
Soft rock under a hard caprock is eroded faster, drilling a **plunge pool**; the undercut lip collapses and the fall **retreats**, cutting a gorge.
What is abrasion?
The river's **load scrapes along the channel**, wearing the bed and banks wider and deeper (sandpaper effect).
Name three river-erosion landforms other than a waterfall.
V-shaped valley, gorge, interlocking spurs, rapids or potholes (any erosional feature).
How does a delta form?
Where the river meets the sea/lake its **velocity falls**, it drops its load (heaviest first) and **flocculation** clumps the clay - sediment builds up faster than waves remove it.
Where does erosion vs deposition act on a meander?
**Erosion** on the fast **outer bend** (river cliff); **deposition** on the slow **inner bend** (slip-off slope / point bar).
How does an ox-bow lake form?
Erosion narrows a meander neck until the river breaks through at a flood; deposition then seals off the old loop as a crescent lake.
What is a levee?
A **raised bank** of coarse sediment dropped first when a flood spills over the channel edge and slows.
Why might two waterfalls erode at different rates?
Differences in **drop height/velocity**, **geology** (rock resistance), **discharge** (basin size/climate) and **load** (abrasion).
What does a top [10] Examine answer on meanders need?
BOTH erosion AND deposition developed, a named river, a weighing of which dominates where/when, and a clear judgement.
Topic 7.1 study notes
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