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    • Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest, Volume 02 (1972)
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    Bed Material Characteristics and Transmissions Losses in an Ephemeral Stream

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    Author
    Murphey, J. B.
    Lane, L. J.
    Diskin, M. H.
    Affiliation
    Southwest Watershed Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Soil and Water Conservation Research Division
    Arizona Agricultural Experiment Station, Tucson
    Issue Date
    1972-05-06
    Keywords
    Hydrology -- Arizona.
    Water resources development -- Arizona.
    Hydrology -- Southwestern states.
    Water resources development -- Southwestern states.
    Bed load
    Channel morphology
    Ephemeral streams
    Streamflow
    Thunderstorms
    Convection
    Storms
    Limiting factors
    Geology
    Geomorphology
    Volume
    Porosity
    Specific yield
    Alluvium
    Absorption
    Cross sections
    Correlation analysis
    Arizona
    Arid lands
    Transmission losses
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    Copyright ©, where appropriate, is held by the author.
    Collection Information
    This article is part of the Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest collections. Digital access to this material is made possible by the Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science and the University of Arizona Libraries. For more information about items in this collection, contact anashydrology@gmail.com.
    Publisher
    Arizona-Nevada Academy of Science
    Journal
    Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest
    Abstract
    An average of 6 to 13 streamflows from intense summer convective storms occurs annually in the walnut gulch experimental station, 58 square miles in southeastern Arizona. Flows last generally less than 6 hours, and the channels are dry 99 percent of the time. The limiting factors imposed by the geology and geomorphology of the channel to transmission losses of a 6 square mile channel in the station are described. The Precambrian to quaternary geology is outlined, and geomorphology of the channels are described. Volume, porosity and specific yield of alluvium were determined. There is 106 acre-feet of alluvium with a mean specific yield of 28 percent, and a maximum water absorbing capacity of 29 acre-feet or 7 acre-feet per mile of reach. Channel slope is insensitive to changes in geological material beneath it or to changes in flow regime. Channel cross section is highly sensitive to geology and flow regime. Transmission losses were highly correlated to volume of inflow.
    ISSN
    0272-6106
    Collections
    Hydrology and Water Resources in Arizona and the Southwest, Volume 02 (1972)

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