An understanding of river- and stream-channel geomorphic responses to various human-caused and natural disturbances is important for effective management, conservation, and rehabilitation of rivers and streams to accommodate multiple, often conflicting, needs. Channel changes may have implications for the protection of property and structures, water supply, navigation, and habitat. The channel-bank erosion that accompanies natural channel migration on a flood plain represents a constant threat to property and structures located in or near the channel. Various human-caused and natural disturbances introduce additional instability to which rivers and streams adjust. Human-caused disturbances include reservoirs, channelization, in-channel sand and gravel extraction, and urbanization. A common natural disturbance is a flood. Possible geomorphic responses of a channel to disturbances include channel-bed degradation (erosion), channel-bed aggradation (deposition of material), channel widening, and channel straightening. These adjustments represent the channel’s attempt to establish a new approximate equilibrium condition.

Channel adjustments are a concern for several reasons. A substantial lowering of the channel bed poses an immediate threat to bridge pier foundations as well as buried pipelines and cables. In addition, substantial bed lowering increases bank height and bank instability that may trigger channel widening. Channel aggradation raises the bed elevation, reduces channel capacity, and increases the likelihood of flooding. Any channel-bed changes that occur on the main-stem rivers and streams also may migrate upstream on the tributaries where additional property, structures, and habitat may be at risk. Finally, any long-term channel adjustment processes also may instigate or worsen local scour problems.
Geomorphic investigations conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey since 1995 have mostly focused on the response of river and stream channels to various types of natural and human-caused disturbances including floods, reservoir construction and operation, and channelization. Such studies document channel changes, reconstruct historical conditions, determine the causes of channel changes, estimate the rate of geomorphic processes, and, in some cases, can enable predictions of future channel changes. Methods have included the use of streamgage data, multidate aerial photography, and onsite data collection to determine the location, timing, magnitude, direction, duration, and rate of channel change.
more publications can be found at: https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/
The aging of America's reservoirs: In-reservoir and downstream physical changes and habitat implications
Geomorphic changes caused by the 2011 flood at selected sites along the lower Missouri River and comparison to historical floods
An investigation of element ratios for assessing suspended-sediment sources in small agricultural basins
Suspended-sediment loads, reservoir sediment trap efficiency, and upstream and downstream channel stability for Kanopolis and Tuttle Creek Lakes, Kansas, 2008-10
Assessment of the geomorphic effects of large floods using streamgage data: The 1951 floods in eastern Kansas, USA
Sedimentation, sediment quality, and upstream channel stability, John Redmond Reservoir, east-central Kansas, 1964-2009
Estimation of sediment sources using selected chemical tracers in the Perry lake basin, Kansas, USA
Geomorphic applications of stream-gage information
Estimation of Sediment Sources Using Selected Chemical Tracers in the Perry Lake and Lake Wabaunsee Basins, Northeast Kansas
Gravel sources for the Neosho River in Kansas, 2004
Flood-related, organic-carbon anomalies as possible temporal markers in reservoir bottom sediments
Historical channel-bed elevation change as a result of multiple disturbances, Soldier Creek, Kansas
Below are partners associated with this project.
An understanding of river- and stream-channel geomorphic responses to various human-caused and natural disturbances is important for effective management, conservation, and rehabilitation of rivers and streams to accommodate multiple, often conflicting, needs. Channel changes may have implications for the protection of property and structures, water supply, navigation, and habitat. The channel-bank erosion that accompanies natural channel migration on a flood plain represents a constant threat to property and structures located in or near the channel. Various human-caused and natural disturbances introduce additional instability to which rivers and streams adjust. Human-caused disturbances include reservoirs, channelization, in-channel sand and gravel extraction, and urbanization. A common natural disturbance is a flood. Possible geomorphic responses of a channel to disturbances include channel-bed degradation (erosion), channel-bed aggradation (deposition of material), channel widening, and channel straightening. These adjustments represent the channel’s attempt to establish a new approximate equilibrium condition.

Channel adjustments are a concern for several reasons. A substantial lowering of the channel bed poses an immediate threat to bridge pier foundations as well as buried pipelines and cables. In addition, substantial bed lowering increases bank height and bank instability that may trigger channel widening. Channel aggradation raises the bed elevation, reduces channel capacity, and increases the likelihood of flooding. Any channel-bed changes that occur on the main-stem rivers and streams also may migrate upstream on the tributaries where additional property, structures, and habitat may be at risk. Finally, any long-term channel adjustment processes also may instigate or worsen local scour problems.
Geomorphic investigations conducted by the U.S. Geological Survey since 1995 have mostly focused on the response of river and stream channels to various types of natural and human-caused disturbances including floods, reservoir construction and operation, and channelization. Such studies document channel changes, reconstruct historical conditions, determine the causes of channel changes, estimate the rate of geomorphic processes, and, in some cases, can enable predictions of future channel changes. Methods have included the use of streamgage data, multidate aerial photography, and onsite data collection to determine the location, timing, magnitude, direction, duration, and rate of channel change.
more publications can be found at: https://pubs.er.usgs.gov/
The aging of America's reservoirs: In-reservoir and downstream physical changes and habitat implications
Geomorphic changes caused by the 2011 flood at selected sites along the lower Missouri River and comparison to historical floods
An investigation of element ratios for assessing suspended-sediment sources in small agricultural basins
Suspended-sediment loads, reservoir sediment trap efficiency, and upstream and downstream channel stability for Kanopolis and Tuttle Creek Lakes, Kansas, 2008-10
Assessment of the geomorphic effects of large floods using streamgage data: The 1951 floods in eastern Kansas, USA
Sedimentation, sediment quality, and upstream channel stability, John Redmond Reservoir, east-central Kansas, 1964-2009
Estimation of sediment sources using selected chemical tracers in the Perry lake basin, Kansas, USA
Geomorphic applications of stream-gage information
Estimation of Sediment Sources Using Selected Chemical Tracers in the Perry Lake and Lake Wabaunsee Basins, Northeast Kansas
Gravel sources for the Neosho River in Kansas, 2004
Flood-related, organic-carbon anomalies as possible temporal markers in reservoir bottom sediments
Historical channel-bed elevation change as a result of multiple disturbances, Soldier Creek, Kansas
Below are partners associated with this project.