“…Measured scour suggests that imbalances in sediment transport rates within the study reaches may have led to maximum scour depths that exceeded 2D 90 , the maximum scour depth associated with equilibrium transport. Although scour depths suggestive of this imbalance occurred in both study reaches, deep scour exceeding a depth of 2D 90 occurred at each ASM location within the downstream reach, which occupied a braided, largely unvegetated channel that is susceptible to large-scale geomorphic changes including channel avulsions (DeVries and Aldrich, 2015). During sediment transporting peak-flow events, the quantity of water and sediment conveyed by different channels within the braided section of the Sauk River may change, resulting in local erosion and deposition of sediment and planform channel changes.…”