« Previous image · Next image »

Debris flow on Middle Fork Salmon River (Idaho, USA)

Click on image to view larger image

« Previous image  · Slide Show · Next image »

Wayne Wurtsbaugh



Registered: January 2000
Posts: 497
users gallery
Violent thunderstorms can cause severe erosion and debris flows that transport sediments and large wood debris to rivers. The photos show the result of a large thunderstorm that brought tons of sediment and wood into the Middle Fork of the Salmon River in July 2002 and created a new rapid.
· Date: January 22, 2004 · Views: 35,278 · Filesize: 95.2kb, 499.7kb · Dimensions: 887 x 1137 ·
Keywords: debris flow erosion sediment transport large woody

« more
8Tahoe_diving_fish_habitat.jpg
8Goldman1997.JPG
8Chaborus_asticopus.jpg
8DDD_application-Clear_Lake_1955.jpg
8Lake_Powell_Sampling.jpg
8Overgrazing_Bear_R.jpg
8Schindler_action.jpg
8Schindler_trap_Bear_Lake.jpg
8Secchi_Lake_Powell.jpg
8Big_wood_beaver_pond_rainbow_signature_PL08.jpg
8Debris_flow_MF_Salmon.jpg
8MF_Salmon_New_rapid.jpg
8Van_Dorn_Bottle_Teofilo.jpg
8Clark-Bumpus_plankton_net.jpg
8Duck_weed__Lemna_sp___Puno_Bay.jpg
8Valley.jpg
8CH01_Oster_culture.jpg
8Algae-Lake_Taihu_China.jpg
8North_Fork_of_Red_River__Oklahoma__USA.jpg
8Lake_Taihu_Pagoda.jpg
8Taihu_Lake_from_Taihu_Laboratory.jpg
· more »
Photo Sharing Gallery by PhotoPost
Copyright © 2007 All Enthusiast, Inc.


© 2009 HayleyAlley.Com.
All images are copyright their respective owners and may not be reused without permission.