The Meuse River (Maas River), the second largest river in The Netherlands, enters the country as a gravel-bed river. Near the city of Roermond, in the so-called Roer Graben, an area where tectonics is known to be active, the river shows a sharp transition from a gravel-bed river with pronounced armouring to a sand-bed river with bedforms. During this transition the D50 of the bed material changes from about 16 to about 2.6 millimetres whilst the bed slope also decreases from about 0.48 to 0.10 m/km. Until now the cause of this transition is not known. The present study attempts to explain this gravel-sand transition by studying the different phenomena that can play a role. The following possible causes can be listed: i) abrasion and b...