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Geological Boundary Conditions and Other Considerations

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Presentation on theme: "Geological Boundary Conditions and Other Considerations"— Presentation transcript:

1 Geological Boundary Conditions and Other Considerations
River Diversions: Geological Boundary Conditions and Other Considerations Harry Roberts Coastal Studies Institute School of the Coast and Environment Louisiana State University

2 Louisiana’s Coastal Land Loss: A Regional Geology Problem
Mississippi Delta Land Loss and Gain USGS

3 Key Geologic Factors in Land Loss
Crustal Downwarping Compaction-Dewatering of Young Deposits Faulting Decreasing Sediment Supply-Increasing Accommodation

4 River Diversions: Best Hope for Off-Setting Coastal Land Loss

5 When the Scale of Coastal Land Loss is Considered — Sediment Availability is a Problem
USGS

6 Sediment Storage in the System Before Human Intervention

7 The Lower Mississippi River and Delta
Vicksburg Baton Rouge New Madrid Memphis New Orleans Mississippi incised valley The Lower Mississippi River and Delta Glacial-period braided streams within incised valley Holocene valley filling and delta construction Valley fill reflects interactions between climate and sea-level change Post-Glacial Alluvium and Deltaic Sediments = ~ km2 Post-Glacial Alluvium and Deltaic Sediments = ~ km2

8 Longitudinal Profile of the Lower Mississippi Valley and Delta
Tracing Late Pleistocene Braided Streams into the Subsurface Using Base of Backswamp Deposits braided stream deposits Based on 325 USACE boreholes from Blum et al. (2008)

9 Lower Mississippi Valley and Delta
Magnitude of Post-Glacial Deposition Balize Delta > 100 m Thick Total storage = km3 or BT of sediment Storage rate = ~ MT/yr over 12,000 yr post-glacial period sediment isopachs adapted from Kulp (2000)

10 Mississippi River Discharges and Sediment Storage
Pre-Dam Sediment Load*: ~400 – 500 MT/yr Mean Sediment Storage**: – 290 MT/yr Mississippi & Atchafalaya Sediment Load: ~205 MT/yr *Suspended Sediment Load Meade et al. (1990); Kesel et al. (1992) **Avg. over 12 kyrs

11 Lower Mississippi River Sediment Load Pre- and Post-Dam Loads
MT/yr Data courtesy of USGS Baton Rouge Data courtesy of USGS Baton Rouge Modern post-dam sediment loads are ~65% of the long-term mean storage component alone

12 Projections of Sea-Level Rise and Subsidence Increasing Accommodation

13 Sea-Level Change Data and Projections
Global Sea-Level Rise Sea-Level Change Data and Projections Satellite observations Tide-gauge observations ~3.0 mm/yr ~1mm/yr ~1.7 – 2.0 mm/yr from IPCC 2007

14 Coastal Plain GPS Vertical Velocities

15 Coastal Plain Elevations

16 Projected Submergence: 2000 vs 2100

17 The Louisiana Coast in 2100? Baton Rouge Lafayette New Orleans
Projected future land loss of 10,500-13,500 km2 New accommodation ~12-16 km3 (Requires ~18-24 BT to fill accommodation)

18 The Louisiana Coast in 2100? Mass balance considerations present tough choices for diversion scenarios New Orleans Baton Rouge Lafayette km2 with 50% of sediment load Projected future land loss of 10,500-13,500 km2

19 A Goal of River Diversions:
Maximize Retention of Sediment Within the Coastal Plain

20 Fundamental Questions: River Diversions
How are the sediments partitioned within the coastal-shelf system? What is the sediment retention capability in the delta and adjacent marshland? What are the important processes linked to sediment transport to the delta-marsh-offshore?

21 Primary Physical Process Data Collection Sites
Delta ADCP Delta ADCP

22 Big Hog Bayou Cross-Channel ADCP Site

23 Partitioning of Discharge: Wax Lake Delta

24 Important Positive Impacts of Hurricanes, Tropical Storms and Cold Fronts

25 Hurricane Isaac

26 Delta Side-Looking ADCP

27 Tropical Storm Lee September 4, 2011

28 Primary Physical Process Data Collection Sites
Delta ADCP Delta ADCP

29 Wax Lake Outlet ADCP, Current Speed (cm/s)

30 Marsh Accretion Study Site

31 Marsh Grass Pushed Over by Water from Big Hog Bayou

32 Sediment Accretion Inland Marsh Site M1 Wax Lake Delta Site 9
4 cm / 6 months 1.5 cm / 5 months

33 Less Energetic but More Frequent than Tropical Storms
Impact of Cold Fronts: Less Energetic but More Frequent than Tropical Storms

34 Rising Flood and Cold Fronts Form Synergistic Sediment Delivery Processes

35 Cold Front Modulation of Sediment Transport
Prefrontal: Onshore Winds Water Level Set-Up Onshore Sediment Transport Postfrontal: Offshore Winds Water Level Set-Down Offshore Sediment Transport

36 Big Hog Bayou, Side-Looking ADCP, Current Speed (cm/s)

37 Demeaned and Offset with Wind Speed
Water Level Demeaned and Offset with Wind Speed

38 What Are Implications of River Diversion Locations?

39 Prefrontal Conditions
RESULT: Marshward Transport of Sediment (20-30 times/year)

40 Postfrontal Conditions
RESULT: Sediment Deposition, Marsh Substrate Accretion, Nutrient Loading

41 Project Results Suggest:
Placement of River Diversions in Landward Parts of Interdistributary Basins Will Maximize Sediment Retention Through Landward Suspended Sediment Transport by Cold-Front-Related Processes.


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