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Effects of an estuarine dam on sediment flux mechanisms in a shallow, macrotidal estuary.

Authors :
Figueroa, Steven Miguel
Lee, Guan-hong
Shin, Hyun-Jung
Source :
Estuarine Coastal & Shelf Science. Jun2020, Vol. 238, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

While estuarine dams have been noted for often resulting in siltation, the flux mechanism and the effect of the dam on the fluxes is not well understood. To gain process-based insight into the spatiotemporal variation and factors that control sediment flux, high resolution in-situ flux measurements were collected at stations 1.5 km and 6.5 km seaward of the Geum estuarine dam, Korea. Fluxes were calculated based on flow collected by Acoustic Doppler Current Profilers (ADCPs) and suspended sediment concentration derived from ADCP acoustic backscatter which was calibrated with water samples. The fluxes were decomposed into components occurring on timescales longer than the tidal cycle (mean-flow flux) and those occurring on the tidal timescale (correlation flux), and ship-borne surveys were conducted to investigate the role of the dam-induced horizontal salinity gradient to stratification and sediment dynamics. Results suggest that the landward correlation fluxes increased because the dam construction amplified the tide and because the correlation flux was proportional to the tidal amplitude, through tidal asymmetry. The dam discharge was found to control the seaward mean-flow fluxes, which were characteristically unsteady and proportional to the discharged volume. Discharge also was found to result in periodic stratification and flocculation asymmetry. The bed level change between the two stations was a balance between the effects of tidal asymmetry and freshwater discharge. For shallow, macrotidal estuaries with small discharge, estuary siltation is expected primarily due to correlation fluxes, and the effect is enhanced when the dam installation amplifies the tides. • The mean-flow flux was seaward, whereas the correlation flux was landward. • The fluxes were proportional to discharged volume and tidal asymmetry, respectively. • The correlation flux was dominant but was modified by mean-flow fluxes from the dam. • The net total flux was convergent and resulted in deposition. • Dam discharge led to tidal straining and resuspension and flocculation asymmetries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02727714
Volume :
238
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Estuarine Coastal & Shelf Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142853238
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecss.2020.106718