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Q:
Natural levees are created during
A) floods.
B) normal flow conditions.
C) low flow conditions.
D) degradation.
Q:
Which of the following is correct of a floodplain?
A) It is an erosional feature located within a depositional feature.
B) Floodplains are not associated with deposition.
C) It is generally filled with layers of alluvium.
D) Despite the name, they are rarely subjected to flooding.
Q:
Which of the following is correct of floodplains?
A) They rarely occur in a fluvial landscape created by an "old" river.
B) They are erosional landforms.
C) They often evolve after a stream has ceased downcutting at a significant rate.
D) They are the areas of a stream where terraces are present.
Q:
Which of the following is incorrect regarding floodplains?
A) They are formed by recurrent flooding in the area adjacent to the stream.
B) Natural levees on either side of a stream are formed during times when the stream is at flood stage and overflows the bank.
C) They are generally low-lying areas.
D) They are characterized by rapids and low waterfalls.
Q:
________ is the general term for unconsolidated clay, silt, sand, gravel, and mineral fragments deposited by running water.
A) Alluvium
B) Deposition
C) Aggradation
D) Degradation
Q:
An interruption in a stream's graded profile of equilibrium is called a
A) gradation.
B) longitudinal interruption.
C) base level.
D) nickpoint.
Q:
Which is typical of a rejuvenated system?
A) entrenched meanders
B) oxbow lakes
C) increased downcutting
D) terraces
E) entrenched meanders, increased downcutting and terraces
Q:
Which of the following is correct of the longitudinal profile of most rivers?
A) It always changes at a constant rate from the headwater region to the sea.
B) It is convex in shape.
C) It is concave in shape.
D) It is gentle upstream and steep downstream.
Q:
Which of the following is incorrectly matched?
A) cutbank outer portion of a stream meander
B) point bar area of substantial erosion
C) aggradation sediment accumulation in the stream channel
D) braided stream maze of interconnected channels
Q:
Entrenchment of a channel occurs because
A) a decrease in stream gradient occurs.
B) a change in the bed load size-distribution occurs.
C) the river flows from consolidated rock into a region composed of loose sediments.
D) rejuvenation occurs due to uplift.
E) isostatic downwarping of the crust occurs.
Q:
A stream that downcuts at the same rate as tectonic uplift, thereby maintaining its course is called a(n)
A) meandering stream.
B) anabranching river.
C) antecedent stream.
D) rejuvenated river.
Q:
Which of the following is likely to occur if the gradient of a stream increases? (Assume that the discharge and sediment load remain unchanged.)
A) The stream will begin to deposit more of its load.
B) The amount of aggradation in the channel will increase.
C) The amount of bed load transport will decrease.
D) The stream will begin to erode its channel and/or its banks.
Q:
A stream becomes graded when
A) erosion and deposition are in equilibrium.
B) a local base level controls the stream.
C) a river achieves a longitudinal stream profile of a steeper upstream portion.
D) its basin becomes rejuvenated.
Q:
A(n) ________ is a stream maintain an equilibrium between the processes of erosion and deposition and, therefore degradation and aggradation.
A) graded stream
B) oxbow
C) anabranching river
D) meandering stream
Q:
A cutoff on a meandering stream results in the formation of
A) an oxbow lake.
B) a levee.
C) a point bar.
D) a terrace.
E) a braided stream.
Q:
A(n) ________ is a meander that becomes isolated from the rest of the river.
A) owbow lake
B) undercut bank
C) point bar
D) cutoff
Q:
As they migrate, meandering streams erode their out outside banks, often forming a narrow neck of land that eventually erodes through and forms a ________ and the stream becomes ________.
A) meander scar; narrower
B) cutoff; straighter
C) cutback; more sinuous
D) point bar; wider
Q:
The portion of each meandering curve subject to the slowest water velocity undergoes aggradation. This results in a(n)
A) meander scar.
B) oxbow.
C) cutback.
D) point bar.
Q:
The portion of each meandering curve subject to the fastest water velocity undergoes the greatest erosive action. This action forms a steep
A) meander scar.
B) oxbow.
C) cutback.
D) point bar.
Q:
Maximum velocity in a meandering stream is
A) near the bottom.
B) at the inner portion of the meander curve.
C) at the center and near the surface.
D) at the outer portion of the meander curve.
Q:
Maximum velocity in a straight channel is found
A) near the bottom.
B) near the inside of a meander.
C) at the center and near the surface, corresponding with the deepest parts of the stream channel.
D) at the center and near the surface, corresponding with the shallowest parts of the stream channel.
Q:
A meandering stream is one that is
A) completely stable.
B) completely unstable.
C) delicately balanced between equilibrium and chaos.
D) closed in terms of energy and matter input.
Q:
Channels with gradual slopes often develop a sinuous form called a ________ pattern.
A) braided stream
B) anabranching
C) meandering stream
D) straight
Q:
Braided streams are not found in
A) areas where the load is higher than the capacity.
B) bedrock-controlled channels.
C) streams subject to new sediment from glaciers or landslides.
D) locations subject to sediment deposition on the river bed.
Q:
Large river systems that have multiple large channels across a vast floodplain are termed
A) anabranching rivers.
B) braided streams.
C) meandering streams.
D) steep-walled channels.
Q:
Excess sediment may result in which of the following channel patterns?
A) V-shaped valleys
B) braided stream
C) meandering stream
D) straight, steep-walled channels
Q:
If the load exceeds a stream's capacity, sediment accumulates in the bed in a process called
A) downcutting.
B) degradation.
C) aggradation.
D) saltation.
Q:
Bed load is moved by
A) saltation.
B) traction.
C) suspension.
D) saltation, traction, and suspension.
E) both saltation and traction, but not suspension.
Q:
The largest material that can be carried by a stream is carried as
A) bed load.
B) suspended load.
C) dissolved load.
D) flow load.
Q:
The sediment load consisting of coarse material too large to remain in suspension, moving along the channel bottom via traction and saltation is the
A) bed load.
B) suspended load.
C) dissolved load.
D) flow load.
Q:
The suspended load of a stream consists of particles that are
A) rolled and bounced along the stream bed.
B) held aloft in the stream flow.
C) dragged along the stream bed.
D) dissolved in solution.
Q:
The sediment load consisting of fine-grained clastic particles held aloft in the stream is the
A) bed load.
B) suspended load.
C) dissolved load.
D) flow load.
Q:
The main process contributing material in solution in sediment load is
A) physical weathering.
B) chemical weathering.
C) biological weathering.
D) erosion.
Q:
The sediment load that travels in solution is
A) bed load.
B) suspended load.
C) dissolved load.
D) flow load.
Q:
Stream transport involves all of the following except
A) saltation.
B) bed load.
C) traction.
D) sheet flow.
Q:
Stream piracy refers to
A) the legal process by which a state secures rights to the waters of a river basin.
B) the merging of two streams flowing in the same valley.
C) the process by which one channel erodes through a drainage divide and captures the headwater regions of another stream.
D) the illegal withdrawal of water from a river.
Q:
A squeeze-and-release action works to loosen and lift rocks in a stream channel. This is an example of
A) deposition.
B) hydraulic action.
C) abrasion.
D) suspension.
Q:
Which of the following is used to measure streamflow?
A) stilling well and staff gauge
B) barometer and sling psychrometer
C) statistical methods of probability
D) reservoirs
Q:
Which of the following lists of processes are in the correct sequence as to their occurrence in nature?
A) deposition, erosion, transport, weathering
B) weathering, erosion, deposition, transport
C) weathering, deposition, erosion, transport
D) weathering, erosion, transport, deposition
Q:
The effect of urbanization on a typical stream hydrograph is to
A) create a base flow.
B) increase lag time between storm peak and peak stream discharge.
C) decrease runoff.
D) decrease lag time between storm peak and peak stream discharge.
Q:
Which of the following is not factored when considering discharge?
A) channel length
B) channel width
C) channel depth
D) velocity
Q:
A tributary that is physically unable to join the main channel on a floodplain due to natural levees is called a
A) alluvial stream.
B) yazoo tributary.
C) levee tributary.
D) meandering tributary.
Q:
A mass of water above base level in a stream has ________ energy; as it flows downstream, this energy becomes ________ energy.
A) kinetic; potential
B) potential; kinetic
C) kinetic; kinetic
D) potential; potential
Q:
When a dam and reservoir are constructed, the natural response of the river and its channel gradient come under the control of
A) the same base level that existed prior to construction.
B) a local, or temporary, base level.
C) the government.
D) an ultimate base level.
Q:
John Wesley Powell put forward the idea of base level, which refers to
A) the amount of discharge in a particular reach of a stream.
B) a level below which a stream cannot erode its valley.
C) an evolutionary cycle of landscape development from fluvial action.
D) the average height of a stream channel.
Q:
The drop in stream elevation per unit distance is known as
A) discharge.
B) base level.
C) gradient.
D) aspect.
Q:
The degradation of a landscape by weathering, erosion, and transportation will ultimately reduce the landscape down to
A) base level.
B) continental shelf.
C) the mountain tops.
D) valley level.
Q:
Which of the following may act as a local base level?
A) a lake that a river flows into
B) a drainage divide
C) the upper surface of a waterfall
D) an interfluve
Q:
The ultimate base level is
A) a drainage divide.
B) a dam.
C) sea level.
D) dependent on the geological substrate.
Q:
Which of the following landforms is incorrectly matched with a drainage pattern?
A) volcano radial
B) folded mountain belt trellis
C) eroded dome annular
D) topographically disrupted areas parallel
Q:
With no clear geometry and no true stream valley, this drainage pattern occurs in areas such as glaciated shield regions.
A) deranged
B) radial
C) parallel
D) dendritic
Q:
Structural domes with concentric patterns of rock strata guide stream courses to form this drainage pattern.
A) radial
B) parallel
C) annular
D) dendritic
Q:
Faulted and jointed landscapes directs streams courses in patterns of right-angle turns forming this drainage pattern.
A) radial
B) rectangular
C) trellis
D) dendritic
Q:
This drainage pattern is associated with steep slopes.
A) parallel
B) dendritic
C) trellis
D) deranged
Q:
This drainage pattern results when streams flow off a central peak or dome.
A) annular
B) trellis
C) radial
D) rectangular
Q:
This drainage pattern is characteristic of dipping or folded topography.
A) annular
B) trellis
C) radial
D) rectangular
Q:
This tree-like drainage pattern efficiently moves water and sediment through its system due to minimization of the total length of each branch.
A) dendritic
B) trellis
C) radial
D) deranged
Q:
The high ground that separates one valley from another and directs sheetflow is known as
A) the maximum contour elevation.
B) drainage divide.
C) an interfluve.
D) the continental divide.
Q:
A drainage system that maintains its original course and pattern as it erodes into underlying horizontal beds of different structure than that in which the system evolved is called a
A) deranged pattern.
B) discordant streams.
C) annular patterns.
D) superposed stream.
Q:
Rectangular drainage patterns form primarily as a result of
A) differential resistance to erosion.
B) domal uplift.
C) flow through anticlinal and synclinal topography.
D) flow through a faulted landscape.
Q:
Stream drainage patterns are determined by which of the following?
A) regional steepnees and relief
B) variations in rock resistance
C) climate
D) climate, regional steepness and relief, and variations in rock resistance
Q:
What is the drainage density of a 100 drainage basin with 25 miles of stream, running through three rivers?
A) 3
B) 33.333
C) 4 mi./mi2
D) 0.25 mi./mi2
Q:
Drainage density refers to
A) the thickness of the water in the stream.
B) the number of channels in an area.
C) a measure determined by dividing the length of all the the channels by the area of its drainage basin.
D) the arrangement of channels in a given area.
Q:
Drainage density is determined by
A) dividing the number of streams in a basin by the basin area.
B) dividing the actual path length of a stream by the shortest path length of the stream.
C) averaging the discharge values across a drainage basin.
D) dividing the total length of all stream channels in the basin by the area of the basin.
Q:
A basin in which water leaves via evapotranspiration or subsurface gravitational flow instead of reaching the ocean is said to have
A) a disappearing stream.
B) sheetflow.
C) a closed system.
D) internal drainage.
Q:
Drainage basins are ________ systems.
A) open
B) closed
C) open in terms of energy, closed in terms of matter
D) closed in terms of energy, open in terms of matter
Q:
A drainage divide that separates drainage basins that empty into different bodies of water surrounding a continent are know as
A) catchments.
B) deltas.
C) continental divides.
D) interfluves.
Q:
Overland flow can concentrate in small grooves called ________, which can enlarge to form ________.
A) striations; potholes
B) potholes; striations
C) rills; gullies
D) gullies; rills
E) striations; gullies
Q:
Watersheds are defined by
A) continental divides.
B) drainage divides.
C) stream orders.
D) fluvial units.
Q:
The area of land from which all water in it drains into the same place is known as a(n)
A) interfluve.
B) watershed.
C) drainage divide.
D) fluvial units.
Q:
Of the world's largest rivers, which has the greatest discharge?
A) Zaire (Congo) River
B) Amazon River
C) Missouri-Ohio-Mississippi river system
D) Chang Chiang (Yangtze) of Asia
Q:
The science of water and its global circulation, distribution, and properties is known as
A) geomorphology.
B) climatology.
C) lithology.
D) hydrology.
Q:
A central peak,such as a volcanic mountain, generally produces a ________ drainage pattern.
A) radial
B) trellis
C) parallel
D) annular
Q:
Steep slopes and some relief generally produce which drainage pattern?
A) dendritic
B) deranged
C) parallel
D) annular
Q:
The general term for channelized water flow, regardless of size, is
A) river.
B) gully.
C) stream.
D) rill.
Q:
Processes that are related expressly to streams and rivers are termed
A) fluvial.
B) geomorphic.
C) lemnetic.
D) lotic.
Q:
Describe the formation of alluvial fans and bajadas.
Q:
Describe the formation and typical characteristics of a floodplain.
Q:
Discuss the concept of the graded stream. Do most streams approximate a graded stream? Why or why not?
Q:
Describe or draw and label the stages of development of an oxbow lake, from meander bend to cut off to oxbow lake, including the location of cut banks and point bars.