Abstract
Abstract. We present a set of observations on meltwater meandering rivulets on ice and compare them (qualitatively and quantitatively) to morphologies commonly found in meandering channels in different media. The observations include data from planned centimeter-scale experiments and from incidental
self-formed millimeter-scale rivulets. Our data show pulsed lateral
migration features, undercut banks and overhangs, meander bend skewness, and meander bend cutoffs. The data also compare well with planform
characteristics of alluvial meandering rivers (sinuosity,
wavelength-to-width ratios, and meander bend fatness and skewness). We
discuss the (ir)relevance of scale in our experiments, which, in spite of
being in the laminar flow regime and likely affected by surface tension
effects, are capable of shedding light into the processes driving formation
and evolution of supraglacial meltwater meandering channels. Our
observations suggest that sinuosity growth in meltwater meandering channels
on ice is a function of flow velocity and the interplay between vertical and
lateral incision driven by temperature differences between flow and ice. In
the absence of recrystallization (depositional analog to alluvial rivers),
bends are more likely to be downstream-skewed and channels show lower
sinuosities.
Funder
Leverhulme Trust
National Science Foundation
H2020 European Research Council
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Geophysics
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