Resource

Geomorphic signature of a dammed Sandy River: The lower Trinity River downstream of Livingston Dam in Texas, USA

Resource Type
Industry Papers and Articles
Reference Title
Geomorphic signature of a dammed Sandy River: The lower Trinity River downstream of Livingston Dam in Texas, USA
Author/Presenter
Smith, Virginia B.
Mohrig, David
Year
2017
Date
15 November 2017
Document Number
doi/10.1016/j.geomorph.2017.09.015
Journal Title
Geomorphology
Journal Volume
297
Abstract/Additional Information

Highlights
• This work investigates a dam's influence on the downstream channel evolution of a sandy river.
• A large spatial-temporal database was used to observe changes in channel morphology downstream of a dam.
• A one-dimensional model estimating bed-material transport downstream of a dam was paired with observed channel geomorphology.

Abstract
Reservoirs behind dams act as deposition sites for much of the sediment being transported by rivers. As a result, the downstream river flow can be well below the transport capacity for bed-material. This promotes bed erosion and other geomorphic changes over some length of river located immediately downstream from a dam. These adjustments have been characterized for the Trinity River, TX, downstream of Livingston Dam. Field measurements and results from a 1D numerical model define a 50–60 river kilometer segment of river undergoing bed erosion as the transport capacity for bed material is reestablished. Consequences of this erosion include lowering of the channel bed, reduction in the sediment volume of channel bars, coarsening of sediment on bar tops, steepening of channel banks, and reduction in lateral migration rates of river bends. Repeat surveys of the river long profile reveals that 40 yr of dam closure has produced up to seven meters of channel-bottom incision downstream of the dam, transforming an initially linear profile into a convex-up long profile. The model output matches this observed change, providing confidence that calculated estimates for spatial and temporal changes in bed-material sediment flux can be used to explore the long-term signature of dam influence on the geomorphology of a sand-bed channel. Measurements of channel geometry, profile, lateral migration, and grain size of the lower Trinity River with distance downstream define both the trend and expected variability about the trend associated with the disruption to the bed-material load.