Affiliation:
1. Department of Environmental Systems Science ETH Zurich Zürich Switzerland
2. Department of Geography University of Zurich Zurich Switzerland
3. Bren School of Environmental Science and Management University of California Santa Barbara CA USA
4. Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL Birmensdorf Switzerland
5. Department of Earth and Planetary Science University of California Berkeley CA USA
Abstract
AbstractBranching river networks are prominent features of the Earth's surface, but the mechanisms that create branching river networks patterns remain elusive. Recent studies have suggested that climate, tectonics, and lithology may control both longitudinal profiles of channel incision and the planform geometry of stream networks. Here we show, by analyzing almost 1 million river junctions and over 4.2 million groundwater wells across the contiguous United States, that stream network branching angles vary systematically with the degree to which streams lose water to, or gain water from, nearby groundwater aquifers. Streams whose surfaces lie above nearby groundwater levels, and thus are likely to be losing flow to underlying aquifers, tend to have narrower branching angles than streams that lie below nearby groundwater levels, and thus are likely to gain flow from groundwater. This systematic relationship persists across several stream orders, and across a wide range in channel gradients.
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics
Cited by
2 articles.
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