Fr. 146.00

Rivers - Form and Process in Alluvial Channels

English · Hardback

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Description

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Originally published in 1982, this book presents a detailed review of alluvial river form and process and integrates the distinct but related approaches of geomorphologists, geologists and engineers to the subject


List of contents










1. Alluvial River Channels: Their Nature and Significance 2. The Drainage Basin: Environmental Controls of the River Channel 3. The Mechanics of Flow and in the Initiation of Sediment Transport 4. Sediment Transport Processes 5. The Magnitude and Frequency of Channel-Forming Events 6. The Morphology of River Cross-Sections 7. River Channel Pattern: Processes, Forms and Sedimentology 8. Channel Gradient and the Long Profile 9. River Channel Changes: Adjustments of Equilibrium 10. Channel Management and Design


About the author










Keith Richards is Professor of Geography at the University of Cambridge, where he is also a Fellow of Emmanuel College. He has been a member of the Department since 1984, and before that was at the University of Hull. He originally graduated from Cambridge, both at Bachelor and PhD levels. During his career he has published in several areas of geomorphology, but his main research focus has been in fluvial geomorphology. He has been Secretary and Chairman of the British Geomorphological Research Group, and an editor of Earth Surface Processes and Landforms. He has written or edited nine books and about 150 papers


Summary

Originally published in 1982, this book presents a detailed review of alluvial river form and process and integrates the distinct but related approaches of geomorphologists, geologists and engineers to the subject

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