“…Geomorphic changes strongly associated with fluvial abrasion (Wohl, 1998;Whipple et al, 2013) may be represented by various features such as the lowering of bedrock channel floors (Seidl et al, 1994;Hancock et al, 1998;Johnson et al, 2010;Inoue et al, 2014), the widening of bedrock channels (Finnegan et al, 2007;Turowski et al, 2008;Fuller et al, 2016), the development of potholes (Springer et al, 2005(Springer et al, , 2006Johnson and Whipple, 2007;Pelletier et al, 2015), the growth of plunge pools (Lamb et al, 2007;Scheingross and Lamb, 2017), knickpoint retreat (Haviv et al, 2010;Valla et al, 2010), and the formation of hanging valleys (Crosby et al, 2007). Following Howard and Kerby (1983) who postulated that the bedrock incision rate can be approximated by the bottom shear stress of streams, many models to describe the erosion rate, collectively called the stream-power model (Whipple, 2004), have been proposed for the study of bedrock river evolution (overviews by Sklar and Dietrich, 2006;Whipple et al, 2013).…”