Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5781122 | Geomorphology | 2017 | 12 Pages |
â¢Icicle Bend on Shawnee Run appeared to violate the inherent nature of efficiency selection.â¢The bend represents abandonment of a more efficient channel at reach scale in favor of a longer, less steep flow path.â¢The flow-partitioning model explains this channel-shifting phenomenon.â¢In fluvial systems, the principle of efficiency selection operates at a highly local scale.
Development of fluvial systems is often described and modeled in terms of principles related to maxima, minima, or optima of various hydraulic or energy parameters that can generally be encompassed by a principle of efficiency selection (more efficient flow routes tend to be preferentially selected and enhanced). However, efficiency selection is highly localized, and the cumulative effects of these local events may or may not produce more efficient pathways at a broader scale. This is illustrated by the case of Icicle Bend on Shawnee Run, a limestone bedrock stream in central Kentucky. Field evidence indicates that a paleochannel was abandoned during downcutting of the stream, and the relocation was analyzed using a flow partitioning model. The bend represents abandonment of a steeper, straighter, more efficient channel at the reach scale in favor of a longer, currently less steep and less efficient flow path. This apparently occurred owing to capture of Shawnee Run flow by a subsurface karst flow path that was subsequently exhumed. The development of Icicle Bend illustrates the local nature of efficiency selection and the role of historical contingency in geomorphic evolution.