Neck cutoffs and their resultant oxbow lakes are important and prominent features of riverine landscapes. Detailed field-based research focusing on the morphologic evolution of neck cutoffs is currently insufficient to fully characterize cutoff evolution. High-resolution bathymetric data were collected over 3 years for the purpose of determining channel morphology and morphologic change on three actively evolving neck cutoffs. Results indicate the following general trends in morphologic adjustment: (1) a longitudinal bar in the upstream meander limb that develops near the entrance to the abandoned bend; (2) a deep scour hole in the downstream meander limb immediately downstream of the cutoff channel; (3) erosion of the bank opposite the cut...
Collapse sinkholes are common in areas where gypsum strata underlie rock that is incompetent to brid...
Chute cutoffs are autogenic mechanisms typical of many meandering rivers with wide cross sections, l...
River bends occasionally meander to the point of cutoff, whereby a river shortcuts itself and isolat...
Chute cutoffs are common features of meandering channels. The development of a chute cutoff locally ...
[Departement_IRSTEA]Eaux [TR1_IRSTEA]ARCEAU [Departement_IRSTEA]Eaux [TR1_IRSTEA]ARCEAUThe morpholog...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
The majority of current meandering river models treat the cutoff process as a geometric scheme: when...
Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without weirs...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
Sinuous channels wandering through coastal wetlands have been thought to lack lateral-migration feat...
Neck cutoffs in meandering rivers have long been thought to occur when the neck width (b) approximat...
Introduction In the Netherlands, stream restoration generally refers to the construction of low-sinu...
<p>Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without we...
The reach of the Clark Fork River just west of Missoula is quite dynamic, and due to erosion and dep...
Humans have had a ubiquitous influence on fluvial systems worldwide (Wohl, 2013). Landscape modifica...
Collapse sinkholes are common in areas where gypsum strata underlie rock that is incompetent to brid...
Chute cutoffs are autogenic mechanisms typical of many meandering rivers with wide cross sections, l...
River bends occasionally meander to the point of cutoff, whereby a river shortcuts itself and isolat...
Chute cutoffs are common features of meandering channels. The development of a chute cutoff locally ...
[Departement_IRSTEA]Eaux [TR1_IRSTEA]ARCEAU [Departement_IRSTEA]Eaux [TR1_IRSTEA]ARCEAUThe morpholog...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
The majority of current meandering river models treat the cutoff process as a geometric scheme: when...
Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without weirs...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
Sinuous channels wandering through coastal wetlands have been thought to lack lateral-migration feat...
Neck cutoffs in meandering rivers have long been thought to occur when the neck width (b) approximat...
Introduction In the Netherlands, stream restoration generally refers to the construction of low-sinu...
<p>Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without we...
The reach of the Clark Fork River just west of Missoula is quite dynamic, and due to erosion and dep...
Humans have had a ubiquitous influence on fluvial systems worldwide (Wohl, 2013). Landscape modifica...
Collapse sinkholes are common in areas where gypsum strata underlie rock that is incompetent to brid...
Chute cutoffs are autogenic mechanisms typical of many meandering rivers with wide cross sections, l...
River bends occasionally meander to the point of cutoff, whereby a river shortcuts itself and isolat...