“…The dominance of clockwise hysteresis loops in previous studies has been interpreted to suggest that a storm produced a sufficiently high discharge to mobilize nearby sources of sediment (along the channel and on nearby fields) and that these sources were exhausted on the rising limb of each storm hydrograph (Arnborg et al, 1967;Walling, 1974;Wood, 1977;VanSickle and Beschta, 1983;Klein, 1984;Jeje et al, 1991;Asselman and Middlekoop, 1998). However, several alternative explanations have been proposed including the length of time between events (Walling and Teed, 1971;Wood, 1977;Burt et al, 1983), the duration of the event (Wood, 1977;Jeje et al, 1991), variable contributions from gullies (diCenzo and Luk, 1997), higher rainfall intensities at the beginning of storms (Jeje et al, 1991), and a reduction in the erosive effects of rainfall and increased inputs from baseflow after the peak discharge (Gregory and Walling, 1973;Wood, 1977).…”