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UCREFRP
UCREFRP Catalog Number
7050
Author
Andrews, E. D.
Title
Effective And Bankfull Discharges of Streams In THe Yampa River Basin, Colorado and Wyoming
USFW Year
1980
USFW - Doc Type
Journal of Hydrology
Copyright Material
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<br />.' !i <br />y~ <br /> <br />f1rlO(C~\i\IS <br />J <br /> <br />L. <br /> <br />tj. <br /> <br />j (I ~' C <br /> <br />/YII"'fA/- /~):;;"""/ O:-JJ,C/1 <br />Myj,,,~y ._.,... IL....)v <br />Journal of Hydrology, 46 (1980) 311-330 311 <br />@ Elsevier Scientific Publishing Company, Amsterdam - Printed in The Netherlands . <br /> <br />[1 ] <br /> <br />EFFECTIVE AND BANKFULL DISCHARGES OF STREAMS IN THE <br />YAMPA RIVER BASIN, COLORADO AND WYOMING <br /> <br />EDMUND D. ANDREWS <br />U.S. Geological SurlJey, Lakewood, CO 80225 (U.S.A.) <br />(Received July 16, 1979; revised and accepted September 11, 1979 <br /> <br />ABSTRACT <br /> <br />Andrews, E.D., 1980. Effective and bankfull discharges in the Yampa River basin. Colora- <br />do and Wyoming. J. Hydro!.. 46: 311-330. <br /> <br />r The effective discharge is defined as the increment of discharge that transports the <br />\ largest fraction of the annual sediment load over a period of years. Increments of the aver- <br />\.. age annual total sediment load transported by various discharges were calculated by the <br />flow-duration, sediment-transport-curve method for 15 gaging stations in the Yampa River <br />basin of Colorado and Wyoming. A total sediment-transport curve was constructed for <br />each gaging station by adding measured instantaneous suspended-sediment discharges to <br />bedload-sediment discharges computed by the Meyer-Peter and Mueller relation. The stream- <br />flow durations were compiled from the respective gaging-station records. The quantity of <br />sediment transported by discharges having various frequencies may be computed by com- <br />bining these two relations. <br />The 15 gaging stations had diverse hydraulic and sediment characteristics. Contributing <br />drainal[e area ranged from 51.8 to 9,960 km2, and mean-annual discharge ranged from <br />0.040 to 43.9 m 3/s. The median diameter of bed material ranged from 0.4 to 86 mm. <br />Mean-annual sediment load from the drainage basins studied ranged from 500 to 1.3.10' <br />metric tons per year. <br />~ The effective discharges at the U; ,agin, statien,s were equaled or exceeded on the aver- <br />age of between 1.5 days per year (0.4% of the time) and 11 days per year (3.0% of the <br />time). The recurrence interval of the effective discharges ranged from 1.18 to 3.26 yr. on <br />l1e annuaUlood series. To compare the effective discharge with the bankfull discharge, <br />cross-sections were surveyed in a self-formed reach of the channel in the vicinity of each <br />gaging station. The bankfull discharge was defined as the discharge which filled the chan- <br />II, \11, nel to the level of the floodplain. At all gaging stations, the effective discharge and the <br />I ,.{:, ~ bankfull discharge were nearly equal. Thus, the stream channels appear to be adjusted to <br />~eir effective discharge. <br /> <br />INTRODUCTION <br /> <br />The concepts of magnitude and frequency of geomorphic forces were de- <br />veloped by Wolman and Miller (1960). Two significant principles of quantita- <br />tive geomorphology were presented. The first principle is that the effective <br />geomorphic force is a relatively frequent event as shown conceptually in Fig. <br />1 using the example of river mechanics. The effectiveness of a given discharge <br />
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