Bifurcation dynamics of natural drainage networks

Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci. 2013 Nov 4;371(2004):20120365. doi: 10.1098/rsta.2012.0365. Print 2013.

Abstract

As water erodes a landscape, streams form and channellize the surficial flow. In time, streams become highly ramified networks that can extend over a continent. Here, we combine physical reasoning, mathematical analysis and field observations to understand a basic feature of network growth: the bifurcation of a growing stream. We suggest a deterministic bifurcation rule arising from a relationship between the position of the tip in the network and the local shape of the water table. Next, we show that, when a stream bifurcates, competition between the stream and branches selects a special bifurcation angle α=2π/5. We confirm this prediction by measuring several thousand bifurcation angles in a kilometre-scale network fed by groundwater. In addition to providing insight into the growth of river networks, this result presents river networks as a physical manifestation of a classical mathematical problem: interface growth in a harmonic field. In the final sections, we combine these results to develop and explore a one-parameter model of network growth. The model predicts the development of logarithmic spirals. We find similar features in the kilometre-scale network.

Keywords: Laplacian growth; network growth; potential flow.

MeSH terms

  • Drainage
  • Groundwater
  • Models, Theoretical*
  • Rivers*
  • Water

Substances

  • Water