16   Artículos

 
en línea
Lin Hou, Hongwu Zhang, Linqi Li, Junchi Zhao and Xiji Li    
Sufficient water is pivotal in maintaining the stability of boundaries in sandy river systems. However the current methodologies employed for computing the water demand for sediment transport in rivers frequently neglect this component. This research uti... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Fazlul Karim, Masud Hasan, Steve Marvanek     Pág. 1 - 17
Understanding the nature of frequent floods is important for characterising channel morphology, riparian and aquatic habitat, and informing river restoration efforts. This paper presents results from an analysis on frequency estimates of low magnitude fl... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Travis R. Stroth, Brian P. Bledsoe, Peter A. Nelson     Pág. 1 - 17
Analytical channel design tools have not advanced appreciably in the last decades, and continue to produce designs based upon a single representative discharge that may not lead to overall sediment continuity. It is beneficial for designers to know when ... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Brian Helms, Jason Zink, David Werneke, Tom Hess, Zan Price, Greg Jennings and Eve Brantley    
Regional data needed for effective stream restoration include hydraulic geometry relationships (i.e., regional curves) and reference channel morphology parameters. Increasingly ecological conditions are being considered when designing, implementing, and ... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Bruce MacVicar, Margot Chapuis, Emma Buckrell and André Roy    
Instream channel restoration is a common practice in river engineering that presents a challenge for research. One research gap is the development of monitoring techniques that allow for testable predictions of sediment transport and supply. Here we use ... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

 
en línea
Carmen Agouridis, Ruth Brockman, Stephen Workman, Lindell Ormsbee and Alex Fogle    
Bankfull hydraulic geometry relationships relate bankfull stream dimensions, such as cross-sectional area, width, mean depth, mean velocity, width to depth ratio, and slope to bankfull discharge. These relationships can assist in determining a design dis... ver más
Revista: Water    Formato: Electrónico

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