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  • Compared to the whitewater streams that tumble down mountainsides, the meandering rivers

  • of the plains may seem tame and lazy. But mountain streams are corralled by the steep-walled

  • valleys they carvetheir courses are literally set in stone. Out on the open plains, those

  • stony walls give way to soft soil, allowing rivers much more freedom to shift their banks

  • and set their own ever-changing courses to the sea: courses that almost never run straight.

  • At least not for long, because all it takes to turn a straight stretch of river into a

  • bendy one is a little disturbance and a lot of time  – and in nature, there’s plenty

  • of both.      

  • Say, for example, that a muskrat  burrows herself a den in one bank of a stream. Her

  • tunnels make for a cozy home,  but they also weaken the bank, which eventually begins to

  • crumble and slump into the stream.

  • Water rushes into the newly-formed hollow, sweeping away loose dirt and making the hollow

  • even hollower, which lets the water rush a little faster and sweep away a little more

  • dirt from the bank...and so on, and so on .

  • As more of the stream’s flow is diverted into the deepening hole on one bank and away

  • from the other side of the channel, the flow there weakens and slows. And since slow-moving

  • water can’t carry the sand-sized particles that fast-moving water can, that dirt drops

  • to the bottom and builds up to make the water there shallower and slower, and then keeps

  • accumulating until the edge of the stream becomes new land on the inside bank.

  •         Meanwhile, the fast-moving water near the

  • outside bank sweeps out of the curve with enough momentum to carry it across the channel

  • and slam it into the other side, where it starts to carve another curve . And then another,

  • and then another, and then another. The wider the stream, the longer it takes the slingshotting

  • current to reach the other side, and the greater the downstream distance to the next curve.

  • In fact, measurements of meandering streams all over the world reveal a strikingly regular

  • pattern : the length of one S-shaped meander tends to be about six times the width of the

  • channel . So little tiny meandering streams tend to look just like miniature versions

  • of their bigger relatives.     

  • As long as nothing gets in the way of a river’s meandering , its curves will continue to grow

  • curvier and curvier until they loop around and bumble into themselves. When that happens,

  • the river follows the straighter path downhill, leaving behind a crescent-shaped remnant called

  • an oxbow lake. Or a billabong. Or a lago en herradura. Or a bras mort ...

  •      We have lots of names for these lakes, since

  • they can occur pretty much anywhere liquid flowswhich brings up an interesting question:

  • what do the Martians call them?

Compared to the whitewater streams that tumble down mountainsides, the meandering rivers

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