It is well known that pebble diameter systematically decreases downstream in rivers. The contribution of abrasion is uncertain, in part because (1) diameter is insufficient to characterize pebble mass loss due to abrasion and (2) abrasion rates measured in laboratory experiments cannot be easily extrapolated to the field. A recent geometric theory describes abrasion as a curvature-dependent process that produces a two-phase evolution: in Phase I, initially blocky pebbles round to smooth, convex shapes with little reduction in axis dimensions; then, in Phase II, smooth, convex pebbles slowly reduce their axis dimensions. Here we provide strong evidence that two-phase abrasion occurs in a natural setting, by examining downstream evolution of ...
Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major con...
Attrition rates and mean transport velocities of coarse fluvial sediments averaged over long periods...
River currents, wind, and waves drive bed-load transport, in which sediment particles collide with e...
Modeling pebble abrasion during bed load transport is of fundamental importance in fluvial geomorpho...
River-bed sediments display two universal downstream trends: fining, in which particle size decrease...
<div><p>River-bed sediments display two universal downstream trends: fining, in which particle size ...
River-bed sediments display two universal downstream trends: fining, in which particle size decrease...
International audienceIn actively eroding landscapes, fluvial abrasion modifies the characteristics ...
One of the most common features in fluvial environments is the systematic downstream decline in grai...
One of the most common features in fluvial environments is the systematic downstream decline in grai...
<p>Data collected from the Rio Mameyes to characterize change in size and shape of river sediment du...
Upstream-facing convex surfaces (UFCS) are formed by bedload abrasion in bedrock rivers and indicate...
International audienceAttrition rates and mean transport velocities of coarse fluvial sediments aver...
Bed load particles in bedrock streams receiving lateral input from hillslopes may or may not show a ...
Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major con...
Attrition rates and mean transport velocities of coarse fluvial sediments averaged over long periods...
River currents, wind, and waves drive bed-load transport, in which sediment particles collide with e...
Modeling pebble abrasion during bed load transport is of fundamental importance in fluvial geomorpho...
River-bed sediments display two universal downstream trends: fining, in which particle size decrease...
<div><p>River-bed sediments display two universal downstream trends: fining, in which particle size ...
River-bed sediments display two universal downstream trends: fining, in which particle size decrease...
International audienceIn actively eroding landscapes, fluvial abrasion modifies the characteristics ...
One of the most common features in fluvial environments is the systematic downstream decline in grai...
One of the most common features in fluvial environments is the systematic downstream decline in grai...
<p>Data collected from the Rio Mameyes to characterize change in size and shape of river sediment du...
Upstream-facing convex surfaces (UFCS) are formed by bedload abrasion in bedrock rivers and indicate...
International audienceAttrition rates and mean transport velocities of coarse fluvial sediments aver...
Bed load particles in bedrock streams receiving lateral input from hillslopes may or may not show a ...
Understanding and quantifying fluvial transport and bedrock abrasion processes have become major con...
Attrition rates and mean transport velocities of coarse fluvial sediments averaged over long periods...
River currents, wind, and waves drive bed-load transport, in which sediment particles collide with e...