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Non-Road Boards => Off-Topic => Topic started by: bugo on February 26, 2013, 08:58:32 AM

Title: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: bugo on February 26, 2013, 08:58:32 AM
If you scroll to the south, there's a small river that runs from east to west.  The body of water in question is uphill from the river.  My friend calls it a "slough" but it looks more like an oxbow to me.  What is it?

http://goo.gl/maps/omd3L
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: mgk920 on February 26, 2013, 09:37:41 AM
It looks to me like a small depression in the rugged landscape that happens to play host to what I would call a small 'lake'.

'Oxbows' are former sections of river in a floodplain that, at some point in time, the river decided to bypass.  That area does not look like a floodplain.

Mike
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: J N Winkler on February 26, 2013, 09:54:22 AM
Could it be a karst lake?
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: Alps on February 26, 2013, 06:36:38 PM
I know what it looks like, but I refrain in mixed company.
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: Brandon on February 26, 2013, 07:57:03 PM
Quote from: Stalin on February 26, 2013, 08:58:32 AM
If you scroll to the south, there's a small river that runs from east to west.  The body of water in question is uphill from the river.  My friend calls it a "slough" but it looks more like an oxbow to me.  What is it?

http://goo.gl/maps/omd3L

It looks like a slough.  An oxbow would be a former channel of a river such as the Mississippi (to use a large example).  We have a lot of these around here due to the post-glacial terrain.
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: triplemultiplex on February 27, 2013, 08:36:44 PM
A slough is any backwater area adjacent to a river that usually was part of the river channel at some point in the past.
An oxbow is a specific type of slough that forms that familiar horseshoe shape.

Over time, the main channel of low gradient rivers tend to migrate back and forth across the valley as sediment is eroded from the outside bends and deposited on the inside bends.  This can lead to abandoned channels and oxbows.

Another thing low gradient rivers tend to do is deposit natural levees along side the main channel during floods.  These can eventually build high enough raise the bed of the river above the level of the floodplain away from the natural levees.  When this happens, the channel can shift into the lower area of the floodplain and abandon large stretches of channel.  This looks like what happened at this place in Arkansas.

I've had some edumacation in the area of fluvial geomorphology.  ;)
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: bugo on February 27, 2013, 09:30:36 PM
Quote from: triplemultiplex on February 27, 2013, 08:36:44 PM
A slough is any backwater area adjacent to a river that usually was part of the river channel at some point in the past.
An oxbow is a specific type of slough that forms that familiar horseshoe shape.

Over time, the main channel of low gradient rivers tend to migrate back and forth across the valley as sediment is eroded from the outside bends and deposited on the inside bends.  This can lead to abandoned channels and oxbows.

Another thing low gradient rivers tend to do is deposit natural levees along side the main channel during floods.  These can eventually build high enough raise the bed of the river above the level of the floodplain away from the natural levees.  When this happens, the channel can shift into the lower area of the floodplain and abandon large stretches of channel.  This looks like what happened at this place in Arkansas.

I've had some edumacation in the area of fluvial geomorphology.  ;)

That's an eloquent way to say what I was thinking happened.

So it is technically a slough?
Title: Re: What kind of water formation is this?
Post by: triplemultiplex on February 28, 2013, 06:49:56 PM
Quote from: Stalin on February 27, 2013, 09:30:36 PM
So it is technically a slough?

In my pseudo-professional opinion, it is indeed a slough.