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Bed load sediment in the thalweg of Campbell creek in Alaska.

The term bed load or bedload describes particles in a flowing fluid (usually water) that are transported along the bed. Bed load is complementary to suspended load and wash load.

Bed load moves by rolling, sliding, and/or saltating (hopping).

Generally, bed load downstream will be smaller and more rounded than bed load upstream (a process known as downstream fining). This is due in part to attrition and abrasion which results from the stones colliding with each other and against the river channel, thus removing the rough texture (rounding) and reducing the size of the particles. However, selective transport of sediments also plays a role in relation to downstream fining: smaller-than average particles are more easily entrained than larger-than average particles, since the shear stress required to entrain a grain is linearly proportional to the diameter of the grain. However, the degree of size selectivity is restricted by the hiding effect described by Parker and Klingeman (1982), wherein larger particles protrude from the bed whereas small particles are shielded and hidden by larger particles, with the result that nearly all grain sizes become entrained at nearly the same shear stress.

References [edit]

  • Waugh, D. "The New Wider World", Cheltenham: Nelson Thorns Ltd, 2003.
  • Ashworth, P.J and Ferguson, R.I (1989) Size-selective entrainment of Bed Load in Gravel Bed Streams, Water Resources Research, Vol 25 (4): 627-634
  • Komar, P.D. (1987) Selective gravel entrainment and the empirical evaluation of flow competence, Sedimentology, Vol 34 (6): 1165–1176
  • Parker, G. and Klingeman, P.C. (1982) On why gravel bed streams are paved, Water Resources Research, Vol 18 (5): 1409-1423
  • Parker, G. and Toro-Escobar, C.M. (2002) Equal mobility of gravel in streams: The remains of the day, Water Resources Research, Vol 38 (1264), doi:10.1029/2001WR000669

Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bed_load — Please support Wikipedia.
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1000000 videos foundNext > 

Sediment Transport, 50 g/m/s (12 mm), Detail

Filmed and edited by: John Gaffney Location: University of Minnesota's St. Anthony Falls Lab Research supported by: The University of Minnesota's Department ...

Bed load sediment transport

Bed load transportation with a moving camera frame. 50g/m/s 7.0mm d50 50g/m/s 0.20mm d50 Grain Size ratio = 35.

bedload transport high speed video

High-speed video of bedload sediment transport. Frame width is 2.2 cm.

Bed load sediment transport close up

A close up of bed load transportation with a still camera frame. 50g/m/s 7.0mm d50 50g/m/s 0.20mm d50 Grain Size ratio = 35 See: http://csdms.colorado.edu/wi...

Suspension and Bedload Sediment Transport

In this video, I describe three basic ways sediment is transported: in suspension, via saltation, and in traction. Saltating and rolling grains (in traction)...

Bedload tranpsort video: Tavertine Grotto

Short video showing facilitated (initiated manually) and unfacilitated motion of gravel in Travertine Grotto, Grand Canyon.

Bedload Sampling & Analysis

The following video discusses the importance of bedload sampling and analysis. The video take you through a number of techniques (Cailleux Roundness, Powers ...

mixed bedload and suspended sediment

High-speed video of bedload gravel and suspended sediment (0.5 mm sand).

Viewing Bedload Movement in a Mountain Gravel-bed Stream

Here's what a gravel stream bottom looks like to a fish or bug. Video courtesy of the USDA Forest Service http://stream.fs.fed.us/publications/videos.html.

Redwood Creek bedload

I took this video yesterday (Dec 22, 2012) during a high flow event on Redwood Creek at Orick (USGS Sta No 11482500). The sampling crew were Smokey Pittman (...

1000000 videos foundNext > 

1 news items

The Car Connection

The Car Connection
Thu, 09 May 2013 14:01:58 -0700

A lighter bed load of Ikea furniture gave the drivetrain more breathing room, for sure. We have noticed an occasional hesitance to shift out of Park from the rotary shift knob--and there's a ghost-limb moment where you'll reach for a shift lever time ...
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