Tag: surface hydrology

  • Bifurcating Waterways

    Bifurcating Waterways

    Your typical river has a single water basin and drains along a river or two on its way to the sea. But there are a handful of rivers and lakes that don’t obey our usual expectations. Some rivers flow in two directions. Some lakes have multiple outlets, each to a separate water basin. That means that water from a single lake can wind up in two entirely different bodies of water.

    The most famous example of these odd waterways is South America’s Casiquiare River, seen running north to south in the image above. This navigable river connects the Orinoco River (flowing east to west in this image) with the Rio Negro (not pictured). Since the Rio Negro eventually joins the Amazon, the Casiquiare River’s meandering, nearly-flat course connects the continent’s two largest basins: the Orinoco and the Amazon.

    For more strange waterways across the Americas, check out this review paper, which describes a total of 9 such hydrological head-scratchers. (Image credit: Coordenação-Geral de Observação da Terra/INPE; research credit: R. Sowby and A. Siegel; via Eos)

  • Antarctic Meltwaters

    Antarctic Meltwaters

    Cerulean blue meltwater glints in this satellite image of the George VI Ice Shelf. Wedged between the Antarctic Peninsula on the right and Alexander Island on the left, the ice shelf itself floats on the ocean. When ice shelves collapse, they do not directly raise sea levels since their weight has already displaced water; but a collapsed ice shelf lets glaciers flow and break up faster, thereby raising water levels.

    In past ice shelf collapses, scientists have noted major buildup and sudden drainage of surface lakes like the ones seen here. Meltwater penetrating through snow and ice can destabilize the shelf and hasten collapse, but the exact mechanisms are hard to track. This Physics Today article summarizes our understanding of the process and some of the methods scientists use to study it. (Image credit: L. Dauphin/NASA Earth Observatory; see also Physics Today)