Abstract

A relatively inexpensive prototype monitor was designed and developed to record temporal variation in scour depth and was field‐tested in a gravel bed stream. The device consists of plastic practice golf balls that are fitted internally with ring magnets and strung on a two‐conductor cable enclosing a small reed switch. The balls are installed and oriented near‐vertically in the streambed. As each ball is disturbed and released, it slides along the cable past the reed switch, and the time of circuit closure caused by passage of the magnet is recorded by a data logger. The device can be applied in arrays that span large areas of the streambed, including in wide channels that are inaccessible during a flood. Data obtained from 19 devices installed in an aggrading site described scouring processes in a pool‐riffle interface during a bed load transport event. Substantial bed excavation occurred in the region of the pool edge during the rising stage, indicating existence of a local, temporally varying imbalance in bed load transport rate. Bed disturbance in the rest of the site prior to aggradation was limited to the surface and immediate subpavement layer.

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