scholarly journals Bed-Sediment Transport Conditions along the Sagavanirktok River in Northern Alaska, USA

Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 774
Author(s):  
Horacio Toniolo

This manuscript presents a study in predicting bed-sediment transport rates along the Sagavanirktok River in Alaska. Extensive field activities took place to accomplish this goal: four hydro-meteorological stations were installed in a 150 km reach along the river in summer 2015. During the same year, pits were excavated near the stations, and in subsequent summers, the pits were surveyed multiple times in conjunction with taking discharge measurements. Water slope was measured and bed sediment was characterized. Site-specific relationships between water levels and cross-section water depths were developed. Volume change between consecutive surveys was calculated, and main flood events between surveys were identified. Finally, the first bed-sediment transport equations valid for the Sagavanirktok River were developed. Considering the intrinsic error in sediment transport predictions, the agreement between predicted and measured sediment transport values is good. These equations could be used by resource managers when predicting the expected time for an excavated material site in the Sagavanirktok River to refill.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sunna Kupfer ◽  
Sara Santamaria-Aguilar ◽  
Lara van Niekerk ◽  
Melanie Lück-Vogel ◽  
Athanasios Vafeidis

Abstract. Recent studies have drawn special attention to the significant dependencies between flood drivers and the occurrence of compound flood events in coastal areas. This study investigates compound flooding from tides, river discharge (Q) and specifically waves using a hydrodynamic model at Breede Estuary, South Africa. We quantify vertical and horizontal differences in flood characteristics caused by driver interaction, and assess the contribution of waves. Therefore, we compare flood characteristics resulting from compound flood scenarios to those in which single drivers are omitted. We find that flood characteristics are more sensitive to Q than to waves, particularly when the latter only coincide with high spring tides. When interacting with Q, however, the contribution of waves is high, causing 10–12 % larger flood extents and 45–85 cm higher water depths, as waves caused backwater effects and raised water levels inside the lower reaches of the estuary. With higher wave intensity, the first flooding began up to 12 hours earlier. Our findings provide insights on compound flooding in terms of flood magnitude and timing at a South African estuary and demonstrate the need to account for the effects of compound events, including waves, in future flood impact assessments of open South African estuaries.


2001 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 44-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl E. Havens ◽  
Kang-Ren Jin ◽  
Andrew J. Rodusky ◽  
Bruce Sharfstein ◽  
Mark A. Brady ◽  
...  

In order to reverse the damage to aquatic plant communities caused by multiple years of high water levels in Lake Okeechobee, Florida (U.S.), the Governing Board of the South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) authorized a "managed recession" to substantially lower the surface elevation of the lake in spring 2000. The operation was intended to achieve lower water levels for at least 8 weeks during the summer growing season, and was predicted to result in a large-scale recovery of submerged vascular plants. We treated this operation as a whole ecosystem experiment, and assessed ecological responses using data from an existing network of water quality and submerged plant monitoring sites. As a result of large-scale discharges of water from the lake, coupled with losses to evaporation and to water supply deliveries to agriculture and other regional users, the lake surface elevation receded by approximately 1 m between April and June. Water depths in shoreline areas that historically supported submerged plant communities declined from near 1.5 m to below 0.5 m. Low water levels persisted for the entire summer. Despite shallow depths, the initial response (in June 2000) of submerged plants was very limited and water remained highly turbid (due at first to abiotic seston and later to phytoplankton blooms). Turbidity decreased in July and the biomass of plants increased. However, submerged plant biomass did not exceed levels observed during summer 1999 (when water depths were greater) until August. Furthermore, a vascular plant-dominated assemblage (Vallisnera, Potamogeton, and Hydrilla) that occurred in 1999 was replaced with a community of nearly 98% Chara spp. (a macro-alga) in 2000. Hence, the lake’s submerged plant community appeared to revert to an earlier successional stage despite what appeared to be better conditions for growth. To explain this unexpected response, we evaluated the impacts that Hurricane Irene may have had on the lake in the previous autumn. In mid-October 1999, this category 1 hurricane passed just to the south of the lake, with wind velocities over the lake surface reaching 90 km h-1 at their peak. Output from a three-dimensional hydrodynamic / sediment transport model indicates that during the storm, current velocities in surface waters of the lake increased from near 5 cm s-1to as high as 100 cm s-1. These strong velocities were associated with large-scale uplifting and horizontal transport of fine-grained sediments from the lake bottom. Water quality data collected after the storm confirmed that the hurricane resulted in lake-wide nutrient and suspended solids concentrations far in excess of those previously documented for a 10-year data set. These conditions persisted through the winter months and may have negatively impacted plants that remained in the lake at the end of the 1999 growing season. The results demonstrate that in shallow lakes, unpredictable external forces, such as hurricanes, can play a major role in ecosystem dynamics. In regions where these events are common (e.g., the tropics and subtropics), consideration should be given to how they might affect long-term lake management programs.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mara Orescanin ◽  
Tyonna McPherson ◽  
Paul Jessen

<p>The Carmel River runs 58 km from the Santa Lucia Mountains through the Carmel Valley eventually entering a lagoon at Carmel River State Beach near Carmel, California, USA. During the dry summer months, the lagoon is closed, with no connection to the coastal ocean.  However, during the wet winter months, the river often breaches through the lagoon allowing water to freely flow between the river and Carmel Bay. Sediment transport, in part owing to river discharge and in part owing to ocean forcing (tides and waves), contributes heavily to whether the lagoon is open or closed: when there are low flow conditions, waves and tides can decrease flow rates in the breach, allowing sediment to settle. The sediment budget is expected to be a closed system, owing to the rocky headlands and long-term stability (no yearly regression or transgression) of the shoreline, despite managed attempts to control breach and closure timing. However, it is currently unknown 1) how velocity profiles evolve during breaching, and 2) how much sediment moves during such an event. The hypothesis is that the breach mouth can completely disappear and re-emerge over a single breach-closure cycle, leading to meter-scale daily accretion and erosion rates of berm height if berm elevation is significantly lower than the expected steady-state berm height. Furthermore, it is hypothesized that during active breaching, discharge rates through the breach channel are larger than upstream river discharge rates owing to elevated water levels within the back lagoon. This study uses a RiverSurveyor M9 Acoustic Doppler Profiler to measure outflow discharge and GPS topographic surveys to quantify elevation changes. A velocity profile can be built which will estimate the sediment transport potential within the breach. The information obtained will help identify and better understand the river discharge thresholds which contribute to frequent breaching as well as estimates of morphological evolution during breaching, which are currently unknown, and can assist in determining likelihood of successful managed breaching and closure events. </p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Rolf ◽  
Martin G. J. Löder ◽  
Hannes Laermanns ◽  
Lukas Kienzler ◽  
Florian Steininger ◽  
...  

<p>The Rhine River flows through six European countries and is in exchange with diverse land use forms and human activities that potentially release microplastics (MPs). The Rhine interacts permanently with its surrounding banks and floodplains by changing water-levels. Several studies have documented the presence of MPs in the Rhine along its course as well as in its tributaries. However, the spatial distribution of MPs due to certain flood events in alluvial floodplains remains widely unclear. The knowledge about the amount and distribution of MPs and on their potential entry pathways into Rhine floodplains is essentially important for an ecological risk assessment. In this study, we analysed the amount and distribution of MPs in a floodplain soil in the nature reserve Merkenich-Langel, in the northern periphery of Cologne (Germany). We hypothesize that MPs are transported by the Rhine and are deposited at the site during flood events. For spatial analysis we used the MIKE software (DHI A/S, Hørsholm Denmark) merged with a digital terrain model of the study site to analyse past flood events and their potential deposition of MP. We chose three sampling transects located within the past flooded area each with three sampling spots with increasing distance and elevation to the river. Samples were taken from two different soil depths (0–5 cm and 5–20 cm) and the samples of the three sampling spots and same depth were combined to one mixed soil sample per transect. MP concentrations were analysed via ATR-FTIR and µ-FPA-FTIR spectroscopy after density separation and enzymatic-oxidative purification. We found an increase of MP concentration per kg of dry soil in the depth 5–20 cm with increasing distance to the river ranging from 25.612 particles/kg to 85.076 particles/kg. The results of MP concentration in 0–5 cm topsoil layer will be compared to the concentration in the soil depth of 5–20 cm. We correlate these results to the frequency of flood events.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 40 ◽  
pp. 06028 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcos Sanz-Ramos ◽  
Arnau Amengual ◽  
Ernest Bladé ◽  
Romu Romero ◽  
Hélène Roux

A forecasting systems based on the coupling of meteorological, hydrologic, hydraulic and risk models is used to minimize the risks associated to water scarcity and flooding. The fulfilment of such complex forecasting chains can allow obtaining information of the most plausible scenarios of water and risk management up to 96 hours ahead. In the present work, flood forecasting was carried out for different events in the upper La Muga basin (including the reservoir), within the European project “Flood Risk Assessment and Management in the Pyrenees” (http://pgriepm. eu/). The main purpose of the project was to develop a method to optimize the management of flood scenarios in order to minimize the flood risk while maximizing the water resources. The good fit of all the models, obtaining the forecasting rainfall and converting the overland flow in water levels in the reservoir, can give tools and important information to the authorities or dam managers for suitable management during the extreme rainfall and flood events.


1990 ◽  
Vol 68 (5) ◽  
pp. 1007-1014 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Neill

Nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizers were added over two growing seasons to marshes dominated by whitetop grass (Scolochloa festucacea) or cattail (Typha glauca) in a prairie lacustrine marsh to assess nutrient limitation and the interaction of nutrient limitation with water depth. For each species, stands were selected at the deep and shallow extremes of its water depth range. Water levels were high during the first year of fertilization and low during the second year, exposing the fertilized stands to a variety of water depths. Nitrogen limited growth in whitetop and cattail marshes. Water level, by controlling whether the soil was flooded or the water table was below the soil surface, affected growth and the degree of nitrogen limitation. In whitetop marshes, nitrogen increased biomass more when the soil was flooded or when standing water was deeper and in cattail marshes, it increased biomass more under intermediate water depths (approximately 0–20 cm) than under more deeply flooded (20–40 cm) or dry conditions. Nitrogen reduced biomass in whitetop marshes the second year, apparently because growth was inhibited by fallen litter from the previous year. Nitrogen did not limit cattail marsh biomass in the driest locations during a year of low water levels. Phosphorus caused a small increase in growth of both species after 2 years. Changes of nitrogen limitation with flooding suggest that annual water level fluctuations, by creating alternating flooded and dry conditions, may influence the primary production of emergent macrophytes through effects on nitrogen cycling.


2012 ◽  
Vol 39 (20) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong Zhang ◽  
Mark M. Meerschaert ◽  
Aaron I. Packman

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