The terms side valley and tributary valley refer to valleys whose brook or river is confluent to a greater one.
Upstream, the valleys can be classified in an increasing order which is equivalent to the usual orographic order: the tributaries are ordered from those nearest to the source of the river to those nearest to the mouth of the river. A confluence is where two or more tributaries or rivers flow together.
The higher the order of a valley, the steeper usually are the hillsides resp. valley slopes. Looking upstream, the steepest slopes are normally near the source of a brook (with the exception of very hard rocks in downstream direction).
The others are glaciologic or geologig reasons:
All these stages of valley genesis can be seen in higher mountain ranges - e.g. in the "young" Rocky mountains, in the "old" ranges and fjords of Scandinavia, or in the Eastern Alps (Salzach or Inn valley). Just in the Glens of Scotland the type 2 is predominant.
Like the main valleys described above, the side- or secondary valley can be V-shaped or U-shaped. Also the valley floor varies - from just a few meters up to some 100 m (e.g. Gastein or St. Moritz, where small towns have been developed instead of 1000 or 1500 m altitude.
Some valleys are stepped in longitudinal direction (german "Talstufe") which means that these zones show a quicker current than in average. Therefore the brook will dig its own narrow canal, and the eroded sediments are deposed at the end of each clammy, forming a series of local plains. They are an important basis of traditional mountain farming because of excellent places for alpine agriculture or pastures.
Sandbanks: often at reaches with slow current, especially near the river banks. Looking at the various rock types of the gravel is an excellent and cheap survey for a summarized geology of the rivers watershed (catchment area).
Valley forks: at most confluences it is clear which stream is the main river and which is the tributary - as one stream is both much longer and carrying clearly more water than the other. It can, however, happen that one stream is longer, but the other carries more water. This case has no fixed rules to decide. Usually the longer valley is chosen as the main valley, e.g. for the higher number of villages.
But in Lowlands the decision may be arbitrarily: In Switzerland the long Alpine Rhine is chosen as the main stream, although the Aare carries more water for her huge midland area.
In the case of upper-Mississippi (which carries more water) and Missouri (which is much longer) the choice is made according to the opposite criterium.
Valleys | Orography | Hydrography | Hydrology | Geomorphology
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"Side valley".
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