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  2. Discharge regime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discharge_regime

    The primary factor affecting river regimes is the climate of its catchment area, both by the amount of rainfall and by the temperature fluctuations throughout the year. This has led Beckinsale to classify regimes based primarily on the climate. [23] Although there is correlation, climate is still not fully reflected in a river regime.

  3. River regime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_regime

    The river regime generally refers to the mathematical relationship between the river discharge and its width, depth and slope. Thus, "river regime" describes a series of characteristic power-law relationships between discharge and width, depth and slope [ 1 ]

  4. River ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_ecosystem

    The "flow regime" of a river or stream includes the general patterns of discharge over annual or decadal time scales, and may capture seasonal changes in flow. [7] [8] While water flow is strongly determined by slope, flowing waters can alter the general shape or direction of the stream bed, a characteristic also known as geomorphology. The ...

  5. River morphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_morphology

    The terms river morphology and its synonym stream morphology are used to describe the shapes of river channels and how they change in shape and direction over time. The morphology of a river channel is a function of a number of processes and environmental conditions, including the composition and erodibility of the bed and banks (e.g., sand, clay, bedrock); erosion comes from the power and ...

  6. Streamflow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streamflow

    Streamflow, or channel runoff, is the flow of water in streams and other channels, and is a major element of the water cycle. It is one runoff component, the movement of water from the land to waterbodies , the other component being surface runoff .

  7. Routing (hydrology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routing_(hydrology)

    In hydrology, routing is a technique used to predict the changes in shape of a hydrograph as water moves through a river channel or a reservoir. In flood forecasting, hydrologists may want to know how a short burst of intense rain in an area upstream of a city will change as it reaches the city. Routing can be used to determine whether the ...

  8. River engineering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_engineering

    The basin of a river is the expanse of country bounded by a watershed (called a "divide" in North America) over which rainfall flows down towards the river traversing the lowest part of the valley, whereas the rain falling on the far slope of the watershed flows away to another river draining an adjacent basin. River basins vary in extent ...

  9. Turbulence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbulence

    A flow situation in which the kinetic energy is significantly absorbed due to the action of fluid molecular viscosity gives rise to a laminar flow regime. For this the dimensionless quantity the Reynolds number (Re) is used as a guide. With respect to laminar and turbulent flow regimes: