- River exceeds its maximumvolume and bursts its banks
- The water is shallower over the floodplain and has a higher hydraulicradius meaning greater friction and a decrease in velocity, leading to deposition
- finerlighter material is deposited furthest away from the mainriver channel.
- During a flood event where a river's bank bursts as it has exceeded its maximum volume
- Sediment is carried in suspension
- When the flood loses velocity (energy), the thickest and coarsest sediment is deposited at the channeledge as finer sediment is transported further to the floodplain
- Overtime, this will result in heightened river banks
- A braided channel occurs when there is a densesediment load being carried in the river and not enoughenergy to entrain it
- A sudden drop in discharge levels results in a mid-channelbar which is above water and increases downstream as the stationary sediment is now exposed.
- The upstream end becomes stabilised with vegetation.
- The established bars (Eyots) become effect narrows the channel
- The channel bar results cause the water flow to split and flow on the two smaller crosssections on either side
- High sediment channels will form a sequence of pools and riffles that accentuate vertical turbulence
- This combined with horizontal turbulence and the thalway, the water will begin to take up a spiralling motion
- The water will spiral from the outer bend, where it erodes, down to the riverbed, then to the inner bend where it deposits any material it carried from the outer bend.
- A sequence of pools and riffles leads to a swingingmotion of the thalweg leading to helicodial flow
-velocity is the fastest on the outer bend at pools, erosion is dominant. This leds to a rivercliff
- Any eroded material at the outer bend will be transported to the inner bend through the Thalweg where it is deposited. helicoidal. This creates a slip-offslope
- Meanders will migrate overtime as the horse-shoe shape is accentuated until it reaches a river bluff
- in the upper course of a river most of the erosion is vertically downwards. this creates steep-sided, V-shapedvalleys.
- the rivers aren't powerful enough to erode laterally
-they have to wind around the high hillsides that stick out their paths on either side. the hillsides that interlock with each other as the river winds around them are called interlocking spurs
- River channels want to take the path of leastresistance
- Increasing curvature leads to decreased width of neck - River cuts through at times of highdischarge, meaning water is not traveling through the horseshoe bend shape but instead straight across
- Deposition occurs in the cut-off and overtime is consolidated by vegetation growth