Morphodynamics of the North Fork Toutle River Near Mount St. Helens, Washington John Pitlick 1, Jon Major 2 and Kurt Spicer 2 1/Geography Department, University.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
9: Running Water Basins: land area that contributes water to a river system Divide: separates different drainage basins Ex. Drainage basin of Mississippi.
Advertisements

Bankfull / Effective / Dominant
GCSE Geography Enquiry
Assessment of gravel transport characteristics of the upper Santa Ana River Scott Wright and Toby Minear USGS California Water Science Center Sacramento,
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 18: MOBILE AND STATIC ARMOR.
River Systems - Runoff.
Surface Water. WATER SEDIMENT The Lane Diagram I. Events During Precipitation A. Interception B. Stem Flow C. Depression Storage D. Hortonian Overland.
Reach-scale morphological changes of a braided river following a 15-year flood with multidate airborne LiDAR S. Lallias-Tacon (1,2), F. Liébault (1), H.
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 13: THE QUASI-STEADY APPROXIMATION.
HEC-RAS US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center
Flood Mapping and Sediment Transport in Otsego County Streams, New York By Les Hasbargen, Tyson Robb, Anthony Grimes, and Roy Widrig Earth Sciences Department,
1D SEDIMENT TRANSPORT MORPHODYNAMICS with applications to RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS © Gary Parker November, CHAPTER 24: APPROXIMATE FORMULATION.
Sculpting Earth’s Surface
Hydrology and Water Resources RG744 Institute of Space Technology December 11, 2013.
HYDRAULICS AND SEDIMENT TRANSPORT: RIVERS AND TURBIDITY CURRENTS
Water Cycle - Running Water
Sediment transport in wadi systems
Abstract Background Conclusion Stream Bed Morphology and Discharge Rates of Deckers Creek Data was collected at 5 different points along a 100 meter transect.
Reynolds Number (Re) Re = R = A/P V = mean velocity  /  =  (which is kinematic viscosity) Re = VR(  /  ), where Driving Forces Resisting Force Re.
Fluvial Processes “the great sculptor of the landscape”
1 DOWNSTREAM HYDRAULIC GEOMETRY of ALLUVIAL RIVERS Pierre Y. Julien Colorado State University New Orleans December 2014.
Stream Stability and Sediment Transport Environmental Hydrology Lecture 21.
Gregory Indivero 31 October  What discharge (cfs) is required to entrain the D 84 (84 th percentile of sediment size distribution) in Red Canyon.
MA BF REFERENCE CURVES Objective Develop bankfull regional curves and equations for estimating bankfull width, mean depth, cross-sectional area, and discharge.
Temporal and spatial patterns of basin scale sediment dynamics and yield.
Chapter 16: Running Water. Hydrologic cycle The hydrologic cycle is a summary of the circulation of Earth’s water supply Processes involved in the hydrologic.
The use of 7 Be to quantify downstream trends in sediment transport below a flood-control dam Paper number: H53B-1237 Results 7 Be-derived transport rates.
San Pedro Creek: A Longitudinal Profile Study Andrew Georgeades Anne Jurek Mary Snow.
Streams Nancy A. Van Wagoner Acadia University Distribution of Earth's water n What are the percentages? -Oceans - Glaciers - Groundwater - Lakes and.
Flow Energy PE + KE = constant between any two points  PE (loss) =  KE (gain) Rivers are non-conservative; some energy is lost from the system and can.
Running Water and Groundwater. Earth as a system: the hydrologic cycle  Illustrates the circulation of Earth's water supply  Processes involved in the.
Stream Erosion and Transport
The hydrologic cycle. Running water Streamflow Two types of flow determined primarily by velocity –Laminar flow –Turbulent flow Factors that determine.
Review of SWRCB Water Availability Analysis Emphasis on Dry Creek Water Availability Analysis.
Design Guidance for Low-water Crossing in Gravel Rivers Xing Fang Lamar University.
 These two agents: erosion and deposition are the most important agents that affect weathered materials.  Erosion involves the physical removal of weathered.
Bradshaw Model. Upstream Downstream Discharge Occupied channel width Channel depth Average velocity Load quantity Load particle size Channel bed roughness.
How do rivers change downstream? (the long (river) profile)
Rivers and Streams. River Systems A river or stream: any body of water flowing downhill in a well defined channel A river or stream: any body of water.
A Sediment Budget for Two Reaches of Alameda Creek (1900s through 2006) Paul Bigelow, Sarah Pearce, Lester McKee, and Alicia Gilbreath.
ONE-DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS ON BEDEVOLUTION ACCOMPANING BANK EROSION Satoru Nakanishi Hokkaido University Graduate School Kazuyoshi Hasegawa Hokkaido University.
7. Bedforms in coarse-grained channels Step-pool units Cluster bedforms Riffle-pool sequences.
Stream Classification. What factors affect stream morphology? Width Depth Slope Velocity Discharge Flow resistance Sediment size Sediment load Leopold.
Gennaro Cioffi. Field evidence for rapid downstream fining of river gravels through selective transport Ferguson, R.I, Hoey, T., Wathen, S. and Werrity,
11. Channel form: river cross- sections and long profiles Cross-section size and shape –The role of discharge and drainage area –Local variation –The role.
Morphodynamics of the Madeira River in Brazil Christine Bonthius The University of Texas at Austin Department of Geography and the Environment
1 DIMENSIONLESS BANKFULL HYDRAULIC RELATIONS FOR EARTH AND TITAN Gary Parker Dept. of Civil & Environmental Engineering and Dept. of Geology University.
River Systems Section 2 Section 2: Stream Erosion Preview Key Ideas Parts of a River System Channel Erosion Development of River Channels Tributary, River.
Hydrology and Water Resources RG744 Institute of Space Technology November 13, 2015.
What is the Bradshaw model?
Estimating Annual Sediment Yield and a Sediment Delivery Ratio for Red Creek, Utah and Wyoming Paul Grams Department of Geography and Earth Resources.
“the great sculptor of the landscape”
Assessing Bank Erosion Potential in the San Antonio River
RUNNING WATER.
Lecture Outlines PowerPoint
Morphodynamic and Sediment Tracers in One-Dimension
THE SEARCH FOR THE HOLY GRAIL:
4 channel types defined at reach scale, based on 3 features
Fluvial Geomorphology
4 channel types defined at reach scale, based on 3 features
EARTH SCIENCE KESSEL.
Summary In addition to the oceans, where else is water found on Earth?
Exercise 1: Fenton River Floodplain Exercise
Discharge, stream flow & channel shape
Chapter 18.
The shapes of stream channels
Changes in a river from source to mouth
Running Water Earth Science Chapter 6
HEC-RAS US Army Corps of Engineers Hydrologic Engineering Center
Longitudinal Profile Survey for Successful Culvert Replacement
Presentation transcript:

Morphodynamics of the North Fork Toutle River Near Mount St. Helens, Washington John Pitlick 1, Jon Major 2 and Kurt Spicer 2 1/Geography Department, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO /US Geological Survey Cascades Volcano Observatory, Vancouver, WA Introduction More than 25 years have elapsed since the eruption of Mt. St. Helens, yet the North Fork Toutle River (NFTR) continues to carry probably the highest sediment loads of any river of comparable size in the conterminous United States [Major et al., 2000]. Much of the sediment carried by the NFTR is derived from the debris avalanche deposited during the May, 1980 eruption (Fig. 1). Alluvium stored in terraces along the NFTR, as well as sediment stored behind an Army Corps of Engineers retention dam, represent significant additional long-term sources of sediment. Acknowledgements Field work for this project was completed while the first author was on sabbatical at the US Geological Survey-Cascades Volcano Observatory; very little of the field work could have been completed without the advice and logistical support of CVO staff. We would also like to acknowledge the people who assisted us in the field, including Tom Hale, Dennis Saunders, and especially Rebecca Thomas. References Major, J.J., T.C. Pierson, R.L. Dinehart, and J.E. Costa, 2000, Sediment yield following severe volcanic disturbance- A two-decade perspective from Mount St. Helens, Geology, v. 28, p Mueller, E. R., J. Pitlick, and J.M. Nelson, 2005, Variation in the reference Shields stress for bed load transport in gravel-bed streams and rivers, Water Resources Research, v. 41, W04006, doi: /2004WR Parker, G., Hydraulic geometry of active gravel rivers, J. Hydraul. Div. Am. Soc. Civ. Eng., 105, , Figure 1. North Fork Toutle River near Mt. St. Helens, WA Figure 2. Study site along the N. Fork Toutle River Figure 4. Regional relations for mean annual flood as a function of (a) drainage area (b) main channel length. Continued erosion in the headwaters of the NFTR will likely affect downstream reaches of the Toutle- Cowlitz River system for decades to come, however, current rates of erosion and sediment transport are poorly constrained, and the information needed to model the evolution of the system is lacking. This poster summarizes data obtained in 2006 to (a) assess present-day trends in slope, grain size and channel morphology, and (b) develop preliminary estimates of the bed load sediment yield of the upper NFTR. Figure 3. Cross section of the dominant channel. Methods, continued Hydrologic Data: To estimate channel-forming discharges we developed empirical relations between high-flows and basin characteristics, using data from 40 gaging stations in SW Washington. Figure 4 shows relations between the mean annual flood and (a) drainage basin area and (b) channel length. Flow and Sediment-Transport Calculations: At each site, we estimated the discharge corresponding to the mean annual flood, and calculated the bed load transport rate for that discharge. Flow conditions (width, depth and velocity) were determined by simultaneously solving the equations for continuity and flow resistance, using the measured channel geometry, reach-average slope, S, and surface grain size: Methods Field Data: We measured channel characteristics, reach-average gradient, and bed material grain size at 12 sites, spaced 2-4 km apart from the base of Mount St. Helens to the toe of the 1980 debris avalanche- a total distance of ~25 km. The sites were located in single-thread reaches (Fig. 2) where we could identify a dominant channel with a well- defined cross-section (Fig. 3). We surveyed three cross sections at each site using an engineering level and stadia rod; average gradients were surveyed over distances of m using the same equipment. The grain size distribution of the surface bed material was determined from point counts of 300 particles selected at evenly spaced intervals along transects on exposed gravel bars. Rock sizes were measured with a gravelometer, or in the case of large boulders with a measuring tape. Sand was included in the point counts, but eliminated from the overall grain size distribution Results Channel Geometry and Grain Size: The slope of the NFTR decreases systematically downstream (with no obvious knickpoints, Fig. 5a), whereas there is little change in the median grain size, D 50 (Fig. 5b). The channel width and depth likewise increase downstream (Fig. 5c and 5d), however, there is a sharp change in depth below site 9, where two tributaries- Coldwater Creek and Castle Creek- join the NFTR. where B is width, U is mean velocity, H is depth, u * = (gHS) 1/2 is the shear velocity (all with respect to the mean annual flood), and k s is the equivalent roughness (3D 84 ). Transport rates were calculated with the relation of Parker (1979), using a variable reference Shields stress,  * r (Mueller et al. 2005): Figure 5. Downstream trends in (a) slope, (b) median grain size, (c) channel width and (d) channel depth. Results, continued Hydraulic Geometry: The downstream adjustments in width and depth of the NFTR scale remarkably well with the mean annual flood (Fig. 6), and the exponents of the resulting power law relations for hydraulic geometry are essentially identical to the commonly cited values, B = aQ 0.5 and H = cQ 0.4. Figure 6. Downstream hydraulic geometry relations. Downstream Trends in Shields Stress and Bed Load Transport Capacity: The figure below left shows that the difference between the Shields stress at the mean annual flood and the Shields stress at the approximate threshold for motion increases slightly downstream (Fig. 7a). This effect, coupled with the increase in channel width and nearly constant grain size, lead to an almost linear relation between the instantaneous bed load transport rate and discharge corresponding to the mean annual flood (Fig. 7b). Figure 7. Downstream trends in (a) Shields stress and (b) instantaneous bed load transport rate. Conclusions The North Fork Toutle River has the opportunity to reshape its channel almost every year in response to high flows. The field data and transport estimates presented here suggest that downstream adjustments in slope, width and depth are consistent with the theory that a channel with unlimited sediment supply and no constraints on width will shape itself to maintain a constant sediment concentration, Q s  Q. BA AB AB AB CD