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  2. Flood control channel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood_control_channel

    Flood control channels are large and empty basins where surface water can flow through but is not retained (except during flooding), or dry channels that run below the street levels of some larger cities, so that if a flash flood occurs the excess water can drain out along these channels into a river or other bodies of water. Flood channels are ...

  3. Flood management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood_management

    Non-structural flood management includes land-use planning, advanced warning systems and flood insurance. Further examples are: "zoning ordinances and codes, flood forecasting, flood proofing, evacuation and channel clearing, flood fight activities, and upstream land treatment or management to control flood damages without physically ...

  4. Flood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flood

    Flood management methods can be either of the structural type (i.e. flood control) and of the non-structural type. Structural methods hold back floodwaters physically, while non-structural methods do not. Building hard infrastructure to prevent flooding, such as flood walls, is effective at managing flooding.

  5. Distributary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distributary

    Common terms to name individual river distributaries in English-speaking countries are arm and channel.These terms may refer to a distributary that does not rejoin the channel from which it has branched (e.g., the North, Middle, and South Arms of the Fraser River, or the West Channel of the Mackenzie River), or to one that does (e.g. Annacis Channel and Annieville Channel of the Fraser River ...

  6. Fluvial terrace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fluvial_terrace

    Because of the manner in which they form, fluvial terraces are underlain by fluvial sediments of highly variable thickness. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] River terraces are the remnants of earlier floodplains that existed at a time when either a stream or river was flowing at a higher elevation before its channel downcut to create a new floodplain at a lower ...

  7. Channel pattern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_pattern

    Straight-type channels can be found at alluvial fans. Braided rivers, which form in (tectonically active) areas that have a larger sedimentary load than the discharge of the river and a high gradient. Meandering rivers, which form a sinuous path in a usually low-gradient plain toward the end of a fluvial system.

  8. Channel types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_types

    A wide variety of river and stream channel types exist in limnology, the study of inland waters.All these can be divided into two groups by using the water-flow gradient as either low gradient channels for streams or rivers with less than two percent (2%) flow gradient, or high gradient channels for those with greater than a 2% gradient.

  9. Channel (geography) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Channel_(geography)

    In physical geography and hydrology, a channel is a landform on which a relatively narrow body of water is situated, such as a river, river delta or strait. While channel typically refers to a natural formation, the cognate term canal denotes a similar artificial structure.