Key
Points
Key Points will give you the main information
you should know to teach the activity.
- Streams
and rivers have the ability to erode and transport sediment.
Erosion is the picking up of sediment by wind or water.
The higher the velocity of water, the better its ability
to transport sediment.
- Because
streams and rivers can erode and transport sediment, sediment
is often carried by these bodies of water all the way from
the mountains to the ocean through watersheds.
- Reading
aerial infrared photographs
- These
photos were taken from an airplane with an infrared
camera in 1999 in different parts of South Carolina.
- The
red areas on the photographs are forested places
or other places with lots of vegetation.
- The
greenish-blue areas are areas of low vegetation,
such as salt marshes.
- The
white and gray area are developed areas.
- Infrared
photographs show how much sediment is suspended
in the water. Bodies of water that are dark blue
in color have almost no sediment suspended in them.
Bodies of water that are almost white have a great
deal of sediment in them. Depending on how
blue or white the water shows up on the infrared
photograph is an indication of how much sediment
is in the water.
- The
photographs of the mouths of the Edisto River, the
Pee Dee River and the Santee Rivers show the outlets
of three watersheds in South Carolina. By looking
at the coloration of the water in these photographs,
students can get an idea of how much sediment is
being transported in each watershed. Because the
photographs of the Pee Dee and Santee Rivers have
more white coloration in them than the Edisto River,
this gives the indication that these bodies of water
transport more sediment than the Edisto River. This
makes sense if students examine a map and see that
the watersheds of the Pee Dee and Santee are much
larger than the watershed of the Edisto River, and
therefore are receiving more water with more sediment.
- The
photograph of the convergence of the Saluda and Broad
Rivers shows where two rivers in Columbia, SC come together
to form the Congaree River. The Saluda River is dark blue
in coloration, indicating very little sediment, while
the Broad River is much lighter in color, indicating that
it is carrying a lot more sediment. The differences in
sediment load can be explained by looking at a South Carolina
map. This section of the Saluda River is downstream of
the Lake Murray dam and reservoir. Because the reservoir
slows down the velocity of the Saluda River so much, all
of its sediment will drop out, and the Saluda River downstream
of the reservoir is carrying very little sediment.
- All
aerial photographs are courtesy of the Land, Water
and Conservation Division of the South Carolina
Department of Natural Resources. For information
on attaining aerial photographs, topographic maps
and other materials contact the SCDNR Map &
Information Center at (803) 734-9108.
Top
Detailed
Information
Detailed Information gives more in-depth background
to increase your own knowledge, in case you want to expand
upon the activity or you are asked detailed questions
by students.
(Click
on photo to enlarge) South Carolina is a state covered by
numerous streams and rivers.
These
streams perform two major functions important for natural vitality.
They remove all the excess water runoff from rainfalls and other
precipitation. In the process of removing rainfall, they also
erode, transport and deposit sediment. By moving sediment, streams
are the major shaper of landforms on approximately 75% of the
Earth’s land area.
To
understand how sediment gets into rivers, one needs a
basic understanding of weathering and erosion. Weathering
is the processes by which rock is broken down into smaller
particles either by physical or chemical processes.
Erosion
is the process by which these smaller particles are then
transported. Transport of sediment can be conducted by
wind, gravity, ice or water. When it rains, water that
does not infiltrate the ground becomes runoff. This water
will first collect in shallow depressions in the land.
As these depressions fill, the excess water will be pulled
by gravity downward along the slope of the land. This
water moves in a slow disorganized fashion and is known
as overland
flow. As the overland flow moves downhill, it
will begin to build in volume and velocity and this increase
in power gives it the ability to erode away soil particles.
This erosion is the beginning of a stream channel. If
water continues to move to this channel and to erode away
the sediment in it, it will eventually be deep enough
to where it is below the water
table, the boundary beneath which all of the ground
is saturated with water. Being below the water table,
allows groundwater to flow into the stream and gives it
a source of continual water flow even during dry periods.
As these streams move downhill they will eventually join
together to form larger streams and rivers.
(Click
on photo to enlarge) The ability of a stream to erode and
transport sediment is dependent on many factors. Primarily among
these is the force and friction produced by the flow of the
water. The more velocity and volume water has, the more friction
it will produce and the more sediment it can erode and transport.
The
velocity of a stream is influenced by the gradient of
the slope it is moving down and the volume of water flowing
through it. The steeper the gradient, the faster the water
will flow. So a stream in the Blue Ridge Mountains will
flow faster than a stream of the same size in the Coastal
Plain. Increased water volume will also increase velocity.
As more water enters a stream the amount of water moving
through the channel increases and the rate it travels
will speed up. This is known as discharge
and is measured in cubic feet per second of water that
passes a given point. Velocity is not uniform across a
stream, but tends to be faster the deeper the water is,
because a larger volume of water is moved in the deeper
parts.
Topography
and climate both affect the velocity of streams. Mountainous
area with steep gradients will have faster streams than
flatland areas with gentle gradients. Flatland streams
can be faster though if the area receives more rainfall
than the mountain area, or if the stream in the flatland
has a larger drainage basin than the stream in the mountains,
as a larger volume of water will be in that stream. Rainfall
amounts fluctuate throughout the year, so stream volumes
and velocities will vary with this fluctuation. Generally,
though, the larger the drainage basin of the stream or
river, the higher that stream’s volume, velocity and discharge.
Vegetation
also has an effect on the volume of water that reaches
a stream. Plants are dependent on water to survive. As
it rains, plants will intercept a large amount of the
rainfall before it can become groundwater or surface runoff.
The water not intercepted by the plants is more likely
to become groundwater than surface runoff in these well-vegetated
areas, as the soil under plants tends to be very porous.
Because plants are intercepting rainwater, streams in
these areas are unlikely to have sudden volume increases.
The water is more likely to seep in the streams through
the groundwater than to arrive as surface runoff. Erosion
is low in these areas too, because the root systems of
the plants hold the soil and sediment in place and prevent
water from carrying it away.
(Click
on photo to enlarge) Dry areas with low vegetation have
much more surface runoff and are more likely to have flash floods
than well vegetated areas. With no plants to intercept the water,
and with dry soils tending to have low porosity, almost all
of the water will run off the surface, building in volume and
velocity. Because a high quantity of water can rush through
these areas in a short amount of time, and because there is
little vegetation roots to hold soils in place, these low vegetation
areas are much more prone to erosion. This was a problem in
the Piedmont region of South Carolina during the mid-century.
Farming practices cleared large areas of land and with no vegetation
on them, a great deal of erosion took place. An average of 12
inches of soil was lost to erosion at this time.
The
volume and velocity of a stream create friction on the
beds they travel over. The volume, velocity and friction
create the energy that allows a stream to erode and transport
sediment. When the stream has the energy necessary to
dislodge sediment, it has reached critical
erosion velocity. Different sediment sizes will
have different critical erosion velocities, and it gets
kind of tricky. Clays, the smallest sediment with particle
sizes under .002 mm, has a very low velocity to transport
and can be suspended in water indefinitely. Because of
the tiny particle size, though, clay exhibits a great
deal of cohesion, (it sticks together well). For this
reason, it takes a high critical erosion velocity to erode
clay, about the same velocity it takes to erode gravel,
which has particle sizes more than 500 times that of clay
(2.0 to 100 mm). Gravel needs a lot of energy to erode,
not because of cohesion, but because of its large size.
Unlike the much smaller clay, gravel also needs a lot
of energy to transport it, almost as much velocity as
it needs to erode it. Sand, sediment with particle sizes
of .06 to 2.0 mm, requires less velocity to erode than
both clay and gravel. This is because it is smaller than
gravel but the particles do not have the cohesive property
of clay. Because of size differences, though, it requires
more velocity than clay to transport and less than gravel.
All sediment sizes also have a settling
velocity. This is the velocity of water flow at
which the water no longer has the energy necessary to
transport a specific sediment size. If the water flow
dips below that sediment size’s settling velocity, that
sediment size will settle out. For clay, this velocity
is very low. The water would practically have to stop
flowing for the clay particles to settle out. As particle
size increases, the settling velocity increases with it.
Rivers can transport sand, but without maintaining a certain
velocity, sand will settle out and deposit. Gravel has
the largest particle size. For this reason, the water
would really have to be ripping to have the power to allow
gravel to be transported. This is why it is rare for small
rocks to be seen riding the current downstream, though
at the right velocity it could happen.
(Click
on photo to enlarge) Because the volume and velocity of
water is dependent on rainfall amounts, sediment will go through
periods of being carried and dropped. During high rainfall times,
more and larger sediment can be carried because more water is
flowing through the rivers. When the rainfall is low, the river
velocity and volume will also lessen and some of the larger
sediment will settle out. Then when the rainfall is up again,
the volume and velocity will increase and the sediment is picked
up again and transported a little farther downstream, until
the next dry period comes. This pulsing of stream flow, the
regular changes in water volume and velocity, is a normal characteristic
of natural streams.
Most
streams and rivers dip below their settling velocity for
almost all sediments when they flow into a large body
of standing water such as a lake or ocean. This causes
the sediments to settle out and creates the alluvial
deltas of places such as the Mississippi River
and the Santee River in South Carolina. The deltas are
the sediment deposits of the rivers, generally in a fan-shaped
pattern. Not all rivers carry enough sediment to create
deltas, but they all transport sediment and when this
reaches the sea, it provides some of the sand that replenishes
the beaches.
The
building of dams on the rivers that has created the many
reservoirs in South Carolina, have resulted in large bodies
of water that intercept the sediment on the way to the
ocean. The river current is slowed down when it flows
into these reservoirs and much of its sediment load is
lost. This creates a problem on the coast as little sand
from the mountains can now reach the ocean to replenish
the eroding beaches.
For
information on the watersheds of South Carolina and the
sediment they carry, see the "Background Information"
in the "What is a watershed?" activity.