I Used to Know That: Geography
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About this ebook
Will Williams
Will Williams is the founding teacher at Beeja Meditation. He works as a Program Director for One Giant Mind, a global charity dedicated to promoting all forms of meditation and researching their effects on individuals and society. He started meditating after experiencing stress-related insomnia. After training in India with some of the world’s leading experts in Ayurveda and Vedic meditation, he became a teacher in order to share the benefits with as many people as possible. As part of his coaching work, he has worked with Spotify, Universal Pictures, American Express, the BBC, Tripadvisor and Channel 4. Will runs retreats and has recently launched the Meditation Timer app. www.beejameditation.com
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I Used to Know That - Will Williams
complexity?
THE PHYSICAL WORLD
RIVERS
As rivers provide invaluable resources for so many people around the world – and take the lives of many too – this is probably a good place to start investigating just what we remember of our physical geography. A river – water flowing in a channel downhill – is simple to understand: the merry cascade tumbling down a mountainside; the awe-inspiring waterfall; the long, slow, meandering waterway; the huge body of water of a river in flood, bearing down on all before it . . .
You may have learned where they were and how long they were or you may have waded into them and measured them, pebbles and all. Disappointingly, the former tended to be those in exotic places like Egypt while the latter were usually whatever waterway could be found locally.
THE LONG PROFILE
This refers to the ‘make-up’ of the river, how it changes shape from source to mouth. Rivers are usually divided into three sections: the upper course, the middle course and the lower course, and they can start from springs, bogs or run-off from the sides of steep mountains, which often get rainfall to sustain the streams. Moving from source to mouth, the character of most rivers changes significantly as a result of the interaction of three factors:
Obviously the work of water on the land is only half the story, the underlying rock provides the sketch pad on which the water draws.
WHERE THE RIVER RUNS FASTEST
You might think it’s logical for the river to flow fastest at the source in the upper course, with that steep gradient? Well, you’d think so and it is certainly true that most waterfalls are in the upper course and, yes, they are running rather quickly. But the answer is more complex than that. Over a significant section of river the fastest velocities will be found where the influence of the gradient is enough to defeat the dark forces of friction. In the end, it is in the lower course, where the river channel is most efficient, that the average velocity is at its highest.
HOW DO YOU MEASURE THE WATER IN A RIVER?
The volume of water flowing in a river is called its discharge, and that is calculated as cross-sectional area multiplied by average velocity.
From this derive the units for measuring discharge – cumecs – cubic metres per second. The universally utilized symbol for river discharge is Q.
SHAPING A LANDSCAPE
Rivers give us a good illustration of the importance of ‘high-magnitude-low-frequency events’ in shaping a landscape. For most of the year, a river is easily able to transport the water in it without having too much energy left for erosion. Perhaps four or five times a year the discharge of the river will be enough to fill the channel (known as ‘bankfull discharge’). At about this point the river will have the most energy it can handle given the current shape of the channel. But if the level of water exceeds this, the river will flood and instantly start to slow down. Hence the river can control the times of flood by changing the shape and long profile – by increasing or decreasing the erosion of the channel. But it can only do this if it can no longer transport the river discharge in the current channel. Hence only when the river is at the highest energy state it can handle, will it start to do some new work.
HOW RIVERS DO THEIR WORK
We all learnt the same mnemonic for the processes of fluvial erosion (and it has to be said, coastal erosion too) – CASH:
Corrasion – rocks rubbing against the bed and banks to alter the channel shape. Should of course really be called ‘abrasion’ but that would have left a problem for the mnemonic makers.
Attrition – rocks in the stream rubbing against each other to produce more rounded and smaller particles.
Solution – particles in the water dissolving into the river. In limestone areas with slightly acidic water this helps to produce some of the most luxuriously curvaceous features on our planet. Rainwater reacts with carbon dioxide as it falls through the air, making it weak carbonic acid. Even without any other atmospheric pollutants, rain will always be more acidic.
Hydraulic action – the force of the water in the channel against the bed or banks can cause air to become trapped, with the pressure weakening the bank and causing it to wear away.
HOW RIVERS MOVE LOAD
The ‘load’ in question is, of course, all the material – gravel, pebbles, rocks – that’s carried by the natural flow of the river. Because the river moves it has kinetic energy, and it uses that energy to do the following things:
Flowing – literally moving the water and no more. Apart from some solution on the way, the river will be doing little else.
Transporting – if there is enough energy then the water will carry material with it and move it downstream.
Eroding – apart from the particles involved in solution, there will be very little river erosion done unless the river is in a high-energy state. This may only happen in particular places of fast flow like rapids, or at certain times of the year when discharge is high.
TRANSPORT METHODS
Depending on the size of the particles and the velocity of the water, the river will use the following processes to transport material:
Solution – as you’d expect, soluble material dissolves in the river and moves with the water – an easy starter.
Suspension – fine particles such as mud or silt are suspended in the flow of the water and carried along.
Saltation – due to an increase in river energy, material is moved along in a sequence of temporary suspensions and depositions.
Traction – when a boulder is too big to be carried, or the flow of the water is too slow to entrain it, it is transported by traction – the simple rolling or sliding of load over the riverbed.
In reality, material will move down a river using a variety of these processes. Traction load for example, may find itself gathering speed, colliding with bed load and, for a brief moment, be lifted up into the suspended load. Chances are, of course, that for most load in most rivers, nothing much will happen for most of the year.
Hjulström’s Curve
For geographers, Hjulström’s Curve is one of the most fascinating graphs. In essence, it shows that the relationship between particle size and water velocity isn’t quite as simple as it might seem. Created by Filip Hjulström, a Swedish geographer of the mid-twentieth century, it was produced from research in an artificial river called a flume. The flume allowed Hjulström to make small changes in the speed of the water flow and to record the impact on bed load of different sizes. The graph plots two lines. The higher line shows the speed of water flow needed to pick up a particle of a given size, and the lower line shows the minimum speed required to keep the particle in suspension in the water. Hence a particle will be deposited if the river slows down below the deposition speed and it will be picked up again if the river flows as fast as the entrainment or erosion speed. One can understand why a large rock may need a high velocity of water to pick it up (entrain it). One can also understand that if the water around the rock slows down or is replaced by turbulent slower water, the rock will drop. But why does it take so much energy to entrain the finest clay particles? After all, a piece of rock smaller than a grain of sand doesn’t weigh that