Birmingham is one of my case studies for gcse, so the insight is great and broad, thanks! I have also been wondering for ages why there are sometimes two different tones in rivers and have noticed this in lots of rivers, this video happens to capture exactly what I’m talking about in the background and normally people don’t know what I am talking about. Do you happen to know why this happens? The only reason I could think of was that there was some sediment in the river causing the split but that seems odd as the river is quite slow moving?
Birmingham is one of my case studies for gcse, so the insight is great and broad, thanks!
I have also been wondering for ages why there are sometimes two different tones in rivers and have noticed this in lots of rivers, this video happens to capture exactly what I’m talking about in the background and normally people don’t know what I am talking about. Do you happen to know why this happens? The only reason I could think of was that there was some sediment in the river causing the split but that seems odd as the river is quite slow moving?
I always thought that it's shallower in some parts. Not sure though