Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6431772 Geomorphology 2015 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We collect data in a large gravel-bed river confluence.•Bedload is below-capacity in the main river and at-capacity in the tributary.•The main river bedload nonlinear behaviour is similar to a mobile armour.•Helical flow sorting effect may explain the grain-size distribution in the transect.

The confluence of the regulated Toltén River and its tributary the unregulated Allipén (south of Chile) has proved dynamic in the last decade. Daily bedload measurements with a Helley-Smith sampler, bed surveys, and grain-size distributions of the two rivers are obtained from a field campaign that lasts 3 months in high-flow season. The goals are to quantify total bedload and to understand the balance between tributary and main river and the bedload distribution in space and texture. The bedload transport varies 200-fold, with a maximum of 5000 t/day. The discharge varies five-fold, with a maximum of 900 m3/s. Two-thirds of the total bedload volume are transported through the deeper area of the cross section and gravel is predominant (64%). Average bedload volumes in the confluence seem unbalanced in favour of the tributary. Main river bedload transport is predominantly at below-capacity conditions, while the tributary bedload transport is at-capacity conditions. This is deemed the main reason of inaccuracy of the bedload predictors. The roles of entrainment into suspension, helical flow, partial transport, and mobile armour are discussed.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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