avulsion

views updated Jun 11 2018

avulsion The lateral displacement of a stream from its main channel into a new course across its flood-plain. Normally it is a result of the instability caused by channel aggradation. The avulsion of a stream into an adjacent valley may explain some cases of apparent river capture.

avulsion

views updated May 08 2018

avulsion Lateral displacement of a stream from its main channel into a new course across its floodplain. Normally it is a result of the instability caused by channel aggradation. The avulsion of a stream into an adjacent valley may explain some cases of apparent river capture.

Avulsion

views updated May 11 2018

AVULSION

The immediate and noticeable addition to land caused by its removal from the property of another, by a sudden change in a water bed or in the course of a stream.

When a stream that is a boundary suddenly abandons its bed and seeks a new bed, the boundary line does not change. It remains in the center of the original bed even if water no longer flows through it. This is known as the rule of avulsion.

Avulsion is not the same as accretion or alluvion, the gradual and imperceptible buildup of land by the continuous activity of the sea, a river, or by other natural causes.

avulsion

views updated May 14 2018

avulsion forcible separation or removal. XVII. — L. āvulsiō, -ōn-, f. āvuls- pp. stem of āvellere, f. ā- AB- + vellere pluck; see -SION.

avulsion

views updated May 09 2018

avulsion (ă-vul-shŏn) n. the tearing or forcible separation of part of a structure.