“…Surface grain-size has also been measured using emulsion-based photography (Kellerhals and Bray, 1971;Adams, 1979;Ibbeken and Schleyer, 1986;Church et al, 1987;Rice and Church, 1998), through direct measurement at grid-selected positions on the image, or by counting visible grains and conversion to a mean grain-size via a calibration relation (Church et al, 1987;Rice, 1995). This approach can be extremely time-consuming due to the post processing required, with even the more advanced photo-sieving procedures requiring manual identification and digitisation of grain boundaries (Ibbeken and Schleyer, 1986;Diepenbrook et al, 1992;Diepenbrook and De Jong, 1994;Ibbeken et al, 1998). More recently, digital imagery and automated image processing techniques have been introduced, that provide accurate representations of grain roughness but are limited to small areas (Butler et al, 1998(Butler et al, , 2001aLane, 2002, Sime andFerguson, 2003;Graham et al, 2005), with the exception of Carbonneau et al (2004Carbonneau et al ( , 2005) who have demonstrated some success in the use of aerial imagery for grain-size determination over larger areas of river channel.…”