New views of the morphodynamics of large braided rivers from high-resolution topographic surveys and time-lapse video

D. Murray Hicks*, Maurice J. Duncan, Jeremy M. Walsh, Richard M. Westaway, Stuart N. Lane

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter in a book

35 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Four new technologies were combined to investigate morphological change along a 4 km reach of the 1-km-wide, braided, gravel-bed Waimakariri River on New Zealand's South Island. River-bed topography was surveyed four times over 15 months, capturing the change caused by near-bankfull flood events. Dry areas of river bed were surveyed either with digital photogrammetry or airborne laser scanning. A combination of remote-sensing and ground-based bathymetry was used to survey the beds of wetted braids. Two video cameras, mounted 35 m above the river bed, provide hourly daytime imagery of the central area of the study reach and an invaluable record of the coherence of morphologic features. This data set provides a view of form and process in a large braided river that has hitherto only been possible in laboratory channels, and identifies features such as low relief drainage basins that appear to be unique to field-scale braided channels.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Structure, Function and Management Implications of Fluvial Sedimentary Systems
Subtitle of host publicationIAHS Publication 276
Pages373-380
Number of pages8
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2002

Keywords

  • Airborne laser scanning
  • Braided rivers
  • Digital photogrammetry
  • Time-lapse video
  • Waimakariri River

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