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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2012-04-18
    Description: The beds of steep streams are typically composed of relatively immobile boulders and more mobile patches of gravel and cobbles. Little is known about how variability in flow and sediment flux affect the area, thickness, composition, and grain mobility of sediment patches. To better understand patch dynamics, we measured flow, sediment transport, and bed properties in two steep channels. Patches close to the thalweg varied in area, thickness, and grain size, whereas those outside the thalweg did not. Local variations in transport of several orders of magnitude occurred, even on a patch with a spatially homogeneous grain size distribution. During moderate flow events, partial to selective transport dominated on the entire channel bed and all individual patches. Tracer particles moved freely between different patch classes (e.g., fine and coarse patches exchanged particles), and relatively fine sediment on all patch classes began motion at the same shear stress. Therefore, the selective transport observed for the entire bed was not a result of the preferential transport of only fine patches, but the high relative mobility of finer sediment on all patches. Our results suggest that local flow and sediment supply, and not spatial grain size variations, were the primary drivers of local bed load transport variability. The use of reach-averaged flow properties to understand local patch dynamics may not be applicable.
    Print ISSN: 0148-0227
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2012-01-27
    Description: In mountainous drainage networks, sediment mobilized on hillslopes must first pass through steep streams before reaching lower-gradient channels. The bed of steep channels is typically composed of large, relatively immobile boulders and finer, more mobile gravel. Most sediment transport equations overpredict sediment flux in steep streams by several orders of magnitude because they do not account for the stress borne by immobile grains and the limited availability of the more mobile sediment. We previously developed and tested (in flume experiments) a sediment transport equation that accounts for these two effects. Here we modify the Parker (1990) bed load equation to include the resistance borne by steps and selective transport of the relatively mobile sediment using a range of hiding functions. We test a number of resistance equations and hiding functions, combined with our modified and the original Parker equations, against measured flow and sediment transport in three steep channels. Our modified sediment transport equation generally predicts the transported sediment volumes to within an order of magnitude of the measured values, whereas the unmodified equations do not. The most accurate sediment flux predictions were obtained from using our modified equation, combined with a hiding function that calculates highly selective transport of the relatively mobile sediment. Furthermore, this hiding function has a critical Shields stress that is similar to those reported for lower gradient channels. The effects of the immobile steps on flow and sediment transport are not adequately captured by simply increasing the critical Shields stress to values reported in steep streams.
    Print ISSN: 0043-1397
    Electronic ISSN: 1944-7973
    Topics: Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying , Geography
    Published by Wiley on behalf of American Geophysical Union (AGU).
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  • 3
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2005-11-27
    Description: Photographic equipment and film used during Apollo 14 flight in command and lunar modules and during extravehicular activity
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: APOLLO 14 PRELIM. SCI. REPT. 1971; P 9-32
    Format: text
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  • 4
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2005-11-30
    Description: The photographic objectives of the Apollo 15 mission were designed to support a wide variety of scientific and operational experiments, to provide high-resolution panoramic photographs and precisely oriented metric photographs of the lunar surface, and to document operational tasks on the lunar surface and in flight. Detailed premission planning integrated the photographic tasks with the other mission objectives to produce a balanced mission that has returned more data than any previous space voyage. The return of photographic data was enhanced by new equipment, the high latitude of the landing site, and greater time in lunar orbit. New camera systems that were mounted in the scientific instrument module (SIM) bay of the service module provided a major photographic capability that was not available on any previous lunar mission, manned or unmanned.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Apollo 15 Prelim. Sci. Rept. te; 32 p
    Format: text
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  • 5
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2005-11-30
    Description: The photographic objectives and the photographic equipment of the Apollo 16 flight are described. Translunar and lunar module/lunar surface photography are presented along with the command and service module orbital and transearth photography.
    Keywords: SPACE SCIENCES
    Type: Apollo 16 Prelim. Sci. Rept.; 32 p
    Format: text
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