“…Channelization is now widespread throughout high-income countries and has been done on rivers as diverse as steep, gravel-bed channels of the European Alps (Habersack and Piégay, 2008) (Fig. 5) and lowland, sand-bed channels such as those in Tennessee, USA (Simon, 1994). More than 340,000 km of river channels were channelized during the first 150 years of European settlement in the United States (Schoof, 1980), for example, and channelization along mainstem rivers in Britain varies from 41% in London to 12% in less densely populated regions (Brookes, 1988).…”