Meandering Streams on the Coastal Plain
The ox-bow curves of meandering streams are among the features of the earth’s surface most familiar to the student of physical geography; yet, heretofore, they have been illustrated only by maps, constructed at great labor and expense. Comprehensive photographs of them are rare and are, at best, imperfect and unsatisfactory for purposes of illustration. On the other hand, meandering streams lend themselves admirably to air photography. Equally familiar to the student of geography and physiography is the term “abandoned meander.” These ancient stream courses, many of which are now occupied by marsh, brush, or forest, have been still more difficult to illustrate by means of photographs. In some instances wooded meanders like those near Columbus, Ga. (Fig. 34), long ago abandoned by the stream that formed them, are shown in air pictures in a manner but little less conspicuous than the meanders of the present-day stream. It is believed that instructors will find Figure 34 useful, not only in illustrating meandering streams and abandoned meanders but also in showing how meanders develop.
Fig. 34—The Chattahoochee River south of Columbus, Ga., showing the results of progressive lateral shifting of a meandering stream. In the upper part of the illustration to the left (west) of the stream are light-colored concentric markings which probably represent the gradual shifting of the stream toward the right. As interpreted from the information at hand, this section of the stream at one time occupied a position much farther west than now. It cut away the bank on the east, forming a curved course, depositing sand and mud on the inside of the curve. This typical feature of stream erosion and deposition is to be noted from the picture of the present course of the stream. At the outside of each meander stretches of the bank appear light-colored and denuded of the trees and bushes that line the bank elsewhere. These are scours, a slipping away of the bluff caused by the cutting of the stream into the foot of the bank at points where the velocity of the outside of the current, and consequently its corrosive power, is increased as it swings round the curve. The inside of the sharpest meander shows also the deposit of material due to the fact that the velocity of the inside of the current is checked by the bank, causing it to deposit some of its load. Added to this deposit is much of the material brought by cross-currents from the opposite-lying scour. The light-colored banks are probably successive deposits. Finally, either by a gradual wearing away or by some whim of the current at flood tide, the river chose a shorter course, leaving its old channel as an abandoned meander. Farther south several abandoned meanders may be distinguished, each distinctively marked by a steep bank on the outside of the curve and concentric bandings on the inside. The abandoned channels are especially marked by the trees and brush that fill them in many places. It appears that a well-developed growth of trees is to be found only along the river banks in this region and the growth in the abandoned channels is probably due to the fact that in flood time there is much seepage of water into these old channels if not an actual overflow from the present course of the stream. At the bottom of the picture is to be seen the recently made land under cultivation. The fields appear striated and checkered, obscuring the concentric banding. The illustration is from a mosaic made up at Camp Benning near-by of many photographs matched together, hence there are certain differences in shade due to dark and light prints. Scale, about 1:38,000.
Fig. 35—Map of the same area shown in Fig. 34 enlarged from the corresponding sections of the Columbus and Seale, Ga.-Ala., topographic sheets, 1:62,500, published by the U. S. Geological Survey. The cross section at the bottom lies along the line indicated on the map and extends somewhat beyond the right border of the map. The section shows between the hills the broad lowland over which the Chattahoochee River has meandered. Scale, 1:38,000.