A gully is a landform created by running water, mass movement, or commonly a combination of both eroding sharply into soil or other relatively erodible material, typically on a hillside or in river floodplains or terraces. Gullies resemble large ditches or small valleys, but are metres to tens of metres in depth and width and are characterised by a distinct 'headscarp' or 'headwall' and progress by headward (i.e. upstream) erosion. Gullies are commonly related to intermittent or ephemeral water flow usually associated with localised intense or protracted rainfall events, or snowmelt. Gullies can be formed and accelerated by cultivation practices on hillslopes (often gentle gradient) in farmland, and they can develop rapidly in rangelands from existing natural erosion forms subject to vegetative cover removal and livestock activity.
The earliest known usage of the term is from 1657. It originates from the French word goulet, a diminutive form of goule which means throat. It is possible that the term is connected to the name of a type of knife used at the time, a gully-knife.
Gully erosion can progress through a variety and combination of processes. The erosion processes include incision and bank erosion by water flow, mass movement of saturated or unsaturated bank or wall material, groundwater seepage - sapping the overlying material, collapse of soil pipes or tunnels in dispersive soils, or a combination of these to a greater or lesser degree. Hillsides are more prone to gully erosion when they are cleared of vegetation cover, through deforestation, over-grazing or other means. Gullies in rangelands can be initiated by concentrated water flow down tracks worn by livestock or vehicle tracks. The eroded soil is easily carried by the flowing water after being dislodged from the ground, normally when rainfall falls during short, intense storms such as during thunderstorms.
A gully may grow in length by means of headward (i.e. upstream) erosion at a knick point. This erosion can result from interflow and soil piping (internal erosion) as well as surface runoff.
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Introduction, concepts de base; implosion d'une bulle de cavitation; dynamique des cavits attachées; cavitation dans les structures tourbillonnaires; applications industrielles.
The Seminar proposes an European and transatlantic dialogue around the questions of the social and ecological transition (post-carbon) of marginal spaces, and territories of exploitation as the ancien
vignette|redresse|Après le torrent se forme la rivière (Hautes-Pyrénées). vignette|Phénomène de surcreusement du lit majeur, pouvant participer à un phénomène d'aridification, le niveau piézométrique de la nappe descendant avec celui de la rivière (Bardenas Reales). vignette|Le Waver (Pays-Bas). vignette|Embouchure de la rivière Batiscan (Québec) En hydrographie, une rivière est un cours d'eau au débit moyen à modéré (supérieur à ), recevant des affluents et qui se jette dans une autre rivière ou dans un fleuve.
En hydrologie, le ruissellement ou ruissèlement est l'écoulement des eaux à la surface de la terre, notamment la surface des sols, contrairement à celle y pénétrant par infiltration. L'intensité des précipitations favorise le ruissellement en proportion de l'insuffisance de l'infiltration et de la capacité de rétention de la surface du sol.
vignette|Plateau du haut de falaise, sillonné de rills. Un rill ou ravineau est une incision étroite et superficielle du sol (rigole ou ravine peu profonde) qui est provoquée par l'érosion consécutive au ruissellement concentré sur une petite portion de terrain, notamment sur un talus ou un glacis. Ce phénomène est commun sur les terrains cultivées ou sans végétation, en pente assez forte (sur pente plus faible s'esquisse plus souvent une organisation en badlands.
Explore la correction des cours d'eau, les mesures de protection et la prévention des inondations en modifiant les parcelles et les sections, en mettant l'accent sur la capacité hydraulique et la stabilité environnementale.
Plonge dans les fonctions écologiques de l'hydraulique fluviale et des techniques d'ingénierie des plantes pour prévenir l'érosion et améliorer la croissance de la végétation.
We present a simple, vertically-explicit 2D model of river bank erosion that also takes the effect of sediment stabilization by plant roots into account. The model is solved in quasi-analytical form for an exemplary non-stationary hydrograph temporal signa ...
2023
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High-mountain ecosystems are experiencing acute effects of climate change, most visibly through glacier recession and the ‘greening’ of the terrestrial environment. The streams draining these landscapes are affected by these shifts, integrating hydrologic, ...
2022
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Erosion significantly affects the dynamics of gravity-driven mass flows. In snow avalanches, the snow cover can be substantially eroded but only partially entrained, however, there are very limited investigations to substantiate this difference. Here, we s ...