Dimensionless argument: a narrow grain size range near 2 mm plays a special role in river sediment transport and morphodynamics
-
Published:2024-02-15
Issue:1
Volume:12
Page:367-380
-
ISSN:2196-632X
-
Container-title:Earth Surface Dynamics
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Earth Surf. Dynam.
Author:
Parker GaryORCID, An ChengeORCID, Lamb Michael P., Garcia Marcelo H., Dingle Elizabeth H.ORCID, Venditti Jeremy G.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The grain size 2 mm is the conventional border between sand and gravel. This size is used extensively, and generally without much physical justification, to discriminate between such features as sedimentary deposit type (clast-supported versus matrix-supported), river type (gravel bed versus sand bed), and sediment transport relation (gravel versus sand). Here we inquire as to whether this 2 mm boundary is simply a social construct upon which the research community has decided to agree or whether there is some underlying physics. We use dimensionless arguments to show the following for typical conditions on Earth, i.e., natural clasts (e.g., granitic or limestone) in 20 ∘C water. As grain size ranges from 1 to 5 mm (a narrow band including 2 mm), sediment suspension becomes vanishingly small at normal flood conditions in alluvial rivers. We refer to this range as pea gravel. We further show that bedload movement of a clast in the pea gravel range with, for example, a size of 4 mm moving over a bed of 0.4 mm particles has an enhanced relative mobility compared to a clast with a size of 40 mm moving over a bed of the same 4 mm particles. With this in mind, we use 2 mm here as shorthand for the narrow pea gravel range of 1–5 mm over which transport behavior is distinct from both coarser and finer material. The use of viscosity allows the delineation of a generalized dimensionless bed grain size discriminator between “sand-like” and “gravel-like” rivers. The discriminator is applicable to sediment transport on Titan (ice clasts in flowing methane/ethane liquid at reduced gravity) and Mars (mafic clasts in flowing water at reduced gravity), as well as Earth.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China China Association for Science and Technology
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Reference76 articles.
1. An, C., Parker, G., Fu, X., Lamb, M. P., and Venditti, J. G.: Morphodynamics of downstream fining in rivers with unimodal sand-gravel feed, in: Proceedings International Conference on Fluvial Hydraulics (River Flow 2020), Delft, Netherlands, 7–10 July 2020, p. 2646, CRC Press, ISBN 9781003110958, 2020. 2. Ashida, K. and Michiue, M.: Study on hydraulic resistance and bedload transport rate in alluvial streams, Transactions, Japan Soc. Civil Eng., 206, 59–69, 1972 (in Japanese). 3. Birch, S. P. D., Parker, G., Corlies, P., Soderblom, J., Miller, J. W., Palermo, R., Lora, J. M., Ashton, A. D., Hayes, A. G., and Perron, J. T.: Reconstructing river flows remotely on Earth, Titan, and Mars, P. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 120, e2206837120, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2206837120, 2023. 4. Brownlie, W. R.: Prediction of flow depth and sediment discharge in open channels, Report No. KH-R-43A, W. M. Keck Laboratory of Hydraulics and Water Resources, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California, USA, 1982. 5. Butler, J.: Further reflections on conversations of our time, Diacritics, 27, 13–15, 1997.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|