Overview of fluvial and geotechnical processes for TMDL assessment

Similar documents
Chris Lenhart, John Nieber, Ann Lewandowski, Jason Ulrich TOOLS AND STRATEGIES FOR REDUCING CHANNEL EROSION IN MINNESOTA

Diagnostic Geomorphic Methods for Understanding Future Behavior of Lake Superior Streams What Have We Learned in Two Decades?

Watershed Assessment of River Stability and Sediment Supply: Advancing the Science of Watershed Analysis

Erosion Surface Water. moving, transporting, and depositing sediment.

OBJECTIVES. Fluvial Geomorphology? STREAM CLASSIFICATION & RIVER ASSESSMENT

Watershed concepts for community environmental planning

CR AAO Bridge. Dead River Flood & Natural Channel Design. Mitch Koetje Water Resources Division UP District

How Do Human Impacts and Geomorphological Responses Vary with Spatial Scale in the Streams and Rivers of the Illinois Basin?

Stream Geomorphology. Leslie A. Morrissey UVM July 25, 2012

Ways To Identify Background Verses Accelerated Erosion

Laboratory Exercise #3 The Hydrologic Cycle and Running Water Processes

STUDY GUIDE FOR CONTENT MASTERY. Surface Water Movement

Why Geomorphology for Fish Passage

Landscape Development

Surface Water and Stream Development

ES 105 Surface Processes I. Hydrologic cycle A. Distribution % in oceans 2. >3% surface water a. +99% surface water in glaciers b.

Sediment Supply & Hydraulic Continuity: Workshop Review

Squaw Creek. General Information

NATURAL RIVER. Karima Attia Nile Research Institute

Aquifer an underground zone or layer of sand, gravel, or porous rock that is saturated with water.

(3) Sediment Movement Classes of sediment transported

Why Stabilizing the Stream As-Is is Not Enough

GEOL 1121 Earth Processes and Environments

low turbidity high turbidity

Modeling Upland and Channel Sources of Sediment in the Le Sueur River Watershed, Minnesota

Riparian Assessment. Steps in the right direction... Drainage Basin/Watershed: Start by Thinking Big. Riparian Assessment vs.

Essential Questions. What is erosion? What is mass wasting?

Streams. Water. Hydrologic Cycle. Geol 104: Streams

NATURE OF RIVERS B-1. Channel Function... ALLUVIAL FEATURES. ... to successfully carry sediment and water from the watershed. ...dissipate energy.

Rosgen Classification Unnamed Creek South of Dunka Road

Do you think sediment transport is a concern?

Watershed Conservation Management Planning Using the Integrated Field & Channel Technology of AnnAGNPS & CONCEPTS

PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY. By Brett Lucas

Development and testing of improved physically based streambank erosion and sediment routing routines in SWAT

What Is Water Erosion? Aren t they the same thing? What Is Sediment? What Is Sedimentation? How can Sediment Yields be Minimized?

Minnesota River Turbidity Stakeholder Committee New Ulm Library, August 27, 20090

Modeling Post-Development Runoff and Channel Impacts from Hydromodification: Practical Tools for Hydromodification Assessment

Sediment Transport Analysis for Stream Restoration Design: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly.

Bank Erosion and Morphology of the Kaskaskia River

Avoiding Geohazards in the Mid-Atlantic Highlands by Using Natural Stream Principles

The Hydrologic Cycle STREAM SYSTEMS. Earth s Water and the Hydrologic Cycle. The Hydrologic Cycle. Hydrologic Cycle

mountain rivers fixed channel boundaries (bedrock banks and bed) high transport capacity low storage input output

Earth Science Chapter 6 Section 2 Review

Upper Truckee River Restoration Lake Tahoe, California Presented by Brendan Belby Sacramento, California

Working with Natural Stream Systems

Fluvial Geomorphology

APPENDIX E. GEOMORPHOLOGICAL MONTORING REPORT Prepared by Steve Vrooman, Keystone Restoration Ecology September 2013

Earth Science Chapter 9. Day 6 - Finish Capillary Action Lab - Quiz over Notes - Review Worksheets over Sections 9.2 and 9.3

May 7, Roger Leventhal, P.E. Marin County Public Works Laurel Collins Watershed Sciences

Kaskaskia Morphology Study Headwaters to Lake Shelbyville

ADDRESSING GEOMORPHIC AND HYDRAULIC CONTROLS IN OFF-CHANNEL HABITAT DESIGN

Rivers T. Perron

7.3 Sediment Delivery Analysis

Limitation to qualitative stability indicators. the real world is a continuum, not a dichotomy ~ 100 % 30 % ~ 100 % ~ 40 %

(3) Sediment Movement Classes of sediment transported

Assessing Differences in Ravine Erosion in Seven Mile Creek Park and the Surrounding Area: Implications for Sediment in the Minnesota River

Year 6. Geography. Revision

Vermont Stream Geomorphic Assessment. Appendix E. River Corridor Delineation Process. VT Agency of Natural Resources. April, E0 - April, 2004

STREAM SYSTEMS and FLOODS

Precipitation Evaporation Infiltration Earth s Water and the Hydrologic Cycle. Runoff Transpiration

Final Exam. Running Water Erosion and Deposition. Willamette Discharge. Running Water

Each basin is surrounded & defined by a drainage divide (high point from which water flows away) Channel initiation

Illinois State Water Survey Division

Fresh Water: Streams, Lakes Groundwater & Wetlands

Dolores River Watershed Study

SECTION G SEDIMENT BUDGET

Swift Creek Sediment Management Action Plan (SCSMAP)

Remaining Capacity in Great Lakes Reservoirs

River Morphology. EAD 511 River management

The Yellow River Initiative: The Birth of a System Approach to Challenges Facing the Everglades of the North

16 AUGUST (Monday) Glacial Sediment

Weathering, Erosion, Deposition, and Landscape Development

Patrick Baskfield. Scott Matteson. Minnesota Pollution Control Agency. Minnesota State University Water Resource Center

Improved physically based approaches for Channel Erosion Modeling in SWAT. Balaji Narasimhan, P. M. Allen, J. G. Arnold, and R.

Geomorphology Geology 450/750 Spring Fluvial Processes Project Analysis of Redwood Creek Field Data Due Wednesday, May 26

Running Water Earth - Chapter 16 Stan Hatfield Southwestern Illinois College

Sediment transport and river bed evolution

Black Gore Creek 2013 Sediment Source Monitoring and TMDL Sediment Budget

Gully Erosion Part 1 GULLY EROSION AND ITS CAUSES. Introduction. The mechanics of gully erosion

Application of an Enhanced, Fine-Scale SWAT Model to Target Land Management Practices for Maximizing Pollutant Reduction and Conservation Benefits

Erosion and Deposition

11/12/2014. Running Water. Introduction. Water on Earth. The Hydrologic Cycle. Fluid Flow

Rivers and Streams. Streams. Hydrologic Cycle. Drainage Basins and Divides. Colorado River Drainage Basin. Colorado Drainage Basins.

What do you need for a Marathon?

Measuring Streambank Erosion Bank Profiles to more Robustly Estimate Recession Rates and Calibration of the AnnAGNPS-CEAP Model

Use of SWAT to Scale Sediment Delivery from Field to Watershed in an Agricultural Landscape with Depressions

Analysis of Road Sediment Accumulation to Monumental Creek using the GRAIP Method

Tom Ballestero University of New Hampshire. 1 May 2013

MEANDER MIGRATION MODEL ASSESSMENT FOR THE JANUARY 2005 STORM, WHITMAN PROPERTY, SAN ANTONIO CREEK, VENTURA COUNTY, CALIFORNIA

PolyMet NorthMet Project

Water Quality and Water Quantity: Two sides of the Same Coin. Chris Jones

to set actual loading goals for each indi

Surface Processes Focus on Mass Wasting (Chapter 10)

Science EOG Review: Landforms

River/Stream Erosion Notes

Stream Classification

Influence of the Major Drainages to the Mississippi River and Implications for System Level Management

River Response. Sediment Water Wood. Confinement. Bank material. Channel morphology. Valley slope. Riparian vegetation.

CASE STUDIES. Introduction

Wetland & Floodplain Functional Assessments and Mapping To Protect and Restore Riverine Systems in Vermont. Mike Kline and Laura Lapierre Vermont DEC

Transcription:

Overview of fluvial and geotechnical processes for TMDL assessment Christian F Lenhart, Assistant Prof, MSU Research Assoc., U of M Biosystems Engineering

Fluvial processes in a glaciated landscape Martin County, MN Rocky Mountains (Rosgen)

Hillslope processes Surface erosion Land-use history & changes to load Rates have decreased, but RUSLE and other models- well studied

Sediment delivery Sed. delivery poorly understood Small % of eroded sediment is carried all the way to river mouth S dr = 63 S m 0.40 Rosgen (WARSSS pg. 2 3)

Sed delivery by slope Sediment delivery by slope 2.5 2 1.5 Slope 1 0.5 0 0.0% 10.0% 20.0% 30.0% 40.0% 50.0% 60.0% 70.0% 80.0% 90.0% -0.5 Sediment delivery ratio

Case studies Driftless area: Coon Creek, WI 5% of sediment eroded since European settlement carried out to Mississippi River (Trimble, 1993 - Science article). Rush Creek, MN 4-8 feet on floodplain Elm Creek, MN Sediment measured at gage 8-13% of estimated annual soil erosion (Lenhart 2008)

Legacy sediment Where is the excess sediment from the past 150 years stored? Stream valleys Wetlands and lakes Stream reaches with low velocity and slope; Overwidened reaches (ditches) low unit stream power ( ω )

Depositional areas Ditches have become depositional areas Increased width reduces shear force, inducing deposition (Landwher, 200x)

Lakes and Wetlands

Hillslope processes: Mass soil movement Gravity-driven movements: Falls, slides, flows, soil creep Bluffs are a major source of sediment by mass-wasting in Minnesota River Basin

Geomorphic categories Valley wall = Bluff Streambank = Active channel boundary Ravines = steep tributaries flowing over the valley wall to larger rivers

Ravines

Ravines in Minnesota Basin

Hillslope Erosion: Gullies Sheet erosion Rill erosion Gullies

Gullies within ravines gully inset within larger ravine CS2 Riffle 25 20 Elevation (ft) 15 10 5 Ravine 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 Gully Width from River Left to Right (ft)

Channel Processes Patterns of erosion and deposition

Equilibrium Theory and Streams Idealized stream in equilibrium: Sediment supply in balance with transport Deposition on point bars in balance with erosion on outer bend Are Minnesota streams in equilibrium?

Physical forces in streams Force balance described by equation of motion For channel with flowing water: d(mv)/dt = F gravity + F pressure F shear expanded out: d(mv)/dt =(ρ*g* A* x* SIN α S0) + (Fp1- Fp2) (τb * wp* x) [where, ρ = density of water, g= gravitational constant, A= area, x = change in distance over control volume, S0= channel bottom slope, Fp1 = force at point x, Fp2 = force at point x + x.]

Force balance: streams exist in a dynamic equilibrium Lane s = predicts channel adjustment Channel dimensions shaped by frequently occurring floods bankfull flows

Sediment Transport in channels Bedload Suspended load Wash load

Entrainment equations Shield s Equation

Suspended Sediment Often estimated by TSS (total suspended solids) - organic matter and sediment Turbidity is regulated pollutant

Particle size of SS At most flows levels >70% is silt / clay At high flows fines are <30% frequency 35 30 25 20 15 Particle size of suspended sediment on the Minnesota River at Jordan, MN betweeen 1981 and 2006 10 5 0 90-100 80-90 70-80 60-70 50-60 40-50 30-40 20-30 10 to 20 % silt and clay % of particles finer than sand (0.063mm)

Bedload sediment Moves by bouncing, rolling In MN River basin, comprised mostly of sand Smaller component of total load

40 Threshold sediment size vs. Median Particle Size in Elm Creek bed sediment easily mobilized at high flows Threshold sediment size (mm) 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 Mobilization Deposition Threshold = D50 0 0 5 10 15 Median Bed Particle size - D 50 (mm)

Channel-forming flows Dave Rosgen

Hydrologic-watershed processes More generally, Lane s sediment balance q s D 50 qs q s = sediment discharge D 50 = average diameter of bed particle size q = stream flow S = slope

Changes to equilibrium Changes to watershed hydrology and streamflow cause channel adjustment in Minnesota Recent drainage increases Private tile drainage expansion < 30 years Precipitation high in 1990s Result: increased low and mean flows (Zhang and Schilling, 2007)

Simon and Schumm Channel Evolution Model Most southern Minnesota streams are in stages 3-5, especially 4 and 5

Sources of sediment in rivers Streambanks Bluffs Ravines/gullies Legacy sediment

Channel erosion: streambank Photo of Elm Creek by C. Lenhart

Sediment sources: streambanks Soil Traits of MRB streambanks Allluvium Minnesota River streambanks (high sand%) Gullies within ravines Young glacial till Des Moines Lobe Till (fine silts and clays) Old glacial till Superior lobe- highly compressed, stable

Role of vegetation Hydraulic erosion Hydrologic role less mass wasting by lowering soil moisture Grazing effects on roots Bank Erosion Hazard Index quantifies root influence

Headwaters prairie Grass vs. trees Riparian forests on larger rivers

Sediment sources: Bluffs (valley wall erosion) Dramatic examples of mass-wasting High delivery ratio Stability of denser tills?

Sediment sources: Ravines/gullies Hard to capture events from gullies Active gully only a small % of ravines Sediment delivery is lower than streambanks and bluffs dump out onto MN River floodplain

Sediment sources: Legacy sediment Mean depth of fine sediment in Elm Creek 1.1 feet (n = 360) Little studied recently Historically by SCS after Dust Bowl years

Current Research Ravine, Bluff, Streambank Erosion study in Minnesota River Basin Bioproducts & Biosystems Engineering, U of M Minnesota Pollution Control Agency Purpose: to quantify sediment loads from R, B and S sources; contribution to turbidity problem

Methods Ravines: runoff, TSS monitoring at gully outlets; geomorphic assessment Stream classification, CEM assessment Physical property measurement: critical shear stress, particle size

Study sites

Bank stability and toe erosion model (BSTM) Critical shear stress Cohesive strength

Data Field-measured rates of bank erosion Modeled erosion and transport using CONCEPTS Sediment loading from gullies/ravines Historic rates of channel migration estimated from photos

Preliminary findings Bluffs major sources of sediment; some hard tills are stable (Gupta, Thoma, Mulla) Ravines (Mulla GIS work)? Gullies Streambanks:

Conclusions Examine processes from watershed headwaters to river mouth using WARSSS framework + extra tools Some key processes are different in flat glaciated landscapes versus mountains Total sediment erosion from watershed far exceeds amount carried out

Management Issues Ag erosion has decreased since mid 1900s Channel erosion is increasingly a large % of suspended sediment in rivers Legacy sediment largely ignored Need channel management as well as watershed management