Abstract

AbstractExtensive river training works were undertaken on the upper Hunter River, Australia between 1956 and 1978 in response to rapid lateral migration and channel widening caused by a series of large floods between 1949 and 1955. River training involved artificial cutoffs, extensive realignment, structural bank protection works and tree planting. Channel length and hence sinuosity (ratio of channel length to valley length) decreased throughout each of six reaches located in the 78.9 km long study area as a direct result of the artificial cutoffs and realignment. Although the overall length reduction was less than 5%, one section experienced a 17% reduction. Localized channel straightening directly increased slope, decreased roughness and consequently increased flow velocity. The structural works have generally succeeded, converting an actively migrating stream into a laterally stable channel. Largely because of channel straightening and reduced sediment supply by floodplain reworking, the river has responded by eroding its bed by up to 1.1 m since the 1950s. Bed erosion preferentially removed the sand and fine gravel fraction producing an armour layer of coarse gravel. This armour layer halted further erosion by protecting the underlying fine material and is now only episodically mobilized by floods with return periods greater than 5.6 years on the annual maximum series. Unfortunately degradation was not predicted before the river training works were undertaken and it was only the fortuitous formation of the bed armour layer which prevented the degradation from becoming a major problem.

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