Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 10 Par: 5 (2018)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Time-Lapse Photography of the Edge-of-Water Line Displacements of a Sandbar as a Proxy of Riverine Morphodynamics

Michael Nones    
Renata Archetti and Massimo Guerrero    

Resumen

A simple methodology to track the displacements of a sandbar from a fixed video camera, extracting its morphological features and deriving the associated fluvial morphology is presented, using a small reach of the Po River in Italy as a case study. A camera fixed on a bridge pier acquired images every twelve hours while hourly water levels are derived from a radar hydrometer located upstream of the study area. The quantification of the fluvial bathymetry is achieved by mapping multiple edge-of-water lines of a sandbar before and after high flow conditions in December 2017. Both from video information and 2-D numerical simulations, it is evident that flooding waves can easily remove sediments that accumulated on bars during low flow conditions in this area, redistributing them across the river channel. This video-based methodology?which confirms to be economically attractive if compared to more traditional monitoring systems?proves to be a valuable system to monitor long-term fluvial processes providing detailed indications on how to better plan river management activities.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Polina Lemenkova and Olivier Debeir    
With methods for processing remote sensing data becoming widely available, the ability to quantify changes in spatial data and to evaluate the distribution of diverse landforms across target areas in datasets becomes increasingly important. One way to ap... ver más
Revista: Information

 
Zongmeng Li, Yixuan Wang, Wenmin Zhu, Hongshan Gao, Fenliang Liu, Wei Xing, Chenguang Zhang, Qiang Qiao and Xiaoying Lei    
Research into river processes in different climatic and geomorphic areas is vital for a clearer understanding of the non-linear responses of rivers to climate change. The Huaihe River (HHR) Basin, located in China?s North?South Transition Zone (NSTZ), pr... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Zhiyuan Han, Heng Wang, Hualiang Xie, Huaiyuan Li and Wendan Li    
The morphological changes in an estuarine bay are affected by fluvial and oceanic dynamics, as well as human activities. Human activity has increased considerably in recent years, especially in Lingding Bay of the Pearl River Estuary. Based on mass measu... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Rodrigo L. Tomassini,Claudia I. Montalvo,Elisa Beilinson,Daniel Barasoain,Gabriela I. Schmidt,Esperanza Cerdeño,Alfredo E. Zurita,Ricardo A. Bonini,Ángel R. Miño-Boilini,Luciano L. Rasia,Germán M. Gasparini     Pág. 22 - 56
Arenas Blancas is a poorly known fossiliferous site located in the lower reach of the Chasicó creek (Buenos Aires Province, Argentina), with great relevance from a biostratigraphic viewpoint. The Macrochorobates scalabrinii Biozone was defined in this si... ver más
Revista: Andean Geology

 
Rutger W. A. Siemes, Trang Minh Duong, Pim W. J. M. Willemsen, Bas W. Borsje and Suzanne J. M. H. Hulscher    
Estuaries are continuously adapting to anthropogenic pressure. Because of sea-level rise and reduced fluvial sediment supply, they are at risk of sediment starvation. Contrarily, some estuaries require frequent dredging after artificially deepening the c... ver más