Abstract

AbstractRiver bed sediments often lack fine gravel between 1 and 5 mm, a phenomenon referred to as the “grain size gap.” The gap corresponds to the rapid reduction in grain size associated with the gravel‐sand transition (GST), where median bed material grain size reduces from ∼10 mm gravel to ∼1 mm sand. Fine gravel grain sizes are often present in hillslope sediment, so it is not clear why they are absent on riverbed surfaces. We present a phenomenological laboratory experiment examining changes in sediment dynamics across a GST to examine the behavior of grain size gap material when included in the bed and feed grain size distributions. Our observations indicate that where sand falls out of washload, forming persistent surficial deposits at the GST, grain size gap material experiences enhanced mobility. This is due to hydraulic smoothing by sand that occurs because of a geometric effect, where medium sand bridges interstitial pockets in fine gravel bed surfaces. Our experiments show that gap gravel flux is enhanced by sand deposition, making gravel beds mobile at the threshold of motion. We are unable to maintain an immobile grain size gap gravel bed when sand is fed which explains why gravel beds composed of 1–5 mm particles are so rare on Earth. We hypothesize that in natural systems, grain size gap particles are either buried in the diffuse extension of GSTs or transported into coastal and marine environments where they are more commonly observed.

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